よろしくお願いします^^
All forms of "give" (give,gave,given,gives,giving,gived) is used 909 times.
give me (102/11.23) give up (74/8.15) gave me (59/6.50) given [jp:otoshidama] (39/4.30) gave up ,give us (23/2.53) give money (21/2.31)
By this date I got to know that "give" tends to collocate with personal pronoun(PNP) most frequently.
And in PNP which word is used ... :me (102) , us (23) , you (20) , it (15) , them (4) ,him (3)
e.g) Give me money more this year than last year . Last year, my father gave us 10,000 yen .
The second frequent word with "give" is "up". And noun also come after "give".
e.g) But don't give up !! I want to give bucycle to poor children .
give up . (49/5.44) give me a (19/2.11) gave me a (15/1.67) give money to (14/1.56) give some money (12/1.33) gave up . (10/1.11) given to me (9/1.00)
By this we find "give up ." is most used.(But does Punkt is included in POS??)
Except "punkt", the most used collocation is
In addition to this,
e.g) He said " Please give me a chance . In Japan , adults give money to children. In January , adults give some money to related children .
By the data of "give in BNC, we can find that the word of "give" collocates with PNP most frequently.
And in PNP , especially "you"(3385/4124texts)
e.g)People will give you support. I'll give you the cash later this morning.
The second frequent word in PNP with "give" is "me"(1456/4124texts)and "them"(1403/4124texts)
e.g)I'd like you to give me your opinions. I'll give them some encouragement.
Except PNP , "give" also collocates with article, "a"(2661/4124texts) or "the"(2719/4124texts)
e.g)It is hard to give a clear answer to the question.
Some of the things give the impression that I am quite mad.
e.g)I'll give you a ring back. Give me a drink first.
The same point : "give" is most used with PNP.
The different point : "give up " is less ued in BNC than in JEFFL.
"give PNP a" and "give PNP some" are less used in BNC against JEFFL.
I think "give up" is English for examination in Japan. And English for examination is the difference from native speakers.