News

ISSN Number

2632-6779 (Print)  

2633-6898 (Online)

Abstracting/Indexing/Listing

Scopus

Ulrich’s Periodicals Directory (ProQuest)

MLA International Bibliography

MLA Directory of Periodicals

Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)

QOAM (Quality Open Access Market)

British National Bibliography

WAC Clearinghouse Journal Listings

EBSCO Education

ICI Journals Master List

ERIH PLUS

CNKI Scholar

Gale-Cengage

WorldCat

Crossref

Baidu Scholar

British Library

J-Gate

ROAD

BASE

Publons

Google Scholar

Semantic Scholar

ORE Directory

TIRF

China National Center for Philosophy and Social Sciences Documentation

 

Home Journal Index 2026-3

Flexibility versus Formulaicity: Comparing Phrasal Verb Use between Human-written and AI-generated Academic Essays

Download Full PDF

Siyang Zhou

The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China

 

Chen Chen

Xi'an Jiaotong–Liverpool University, China

 

Qingyang Wu

University of Oxford, UK

 

Abstract

With the rise of Generative AI technology, numerous studies have compared linguistic features of human-produced and AI-generated writings. However, little attention has been paid to the use of phrasal verbs (PVs), a difficult type of two-part verbs, in academic writing. This study chose the 1.7-million-word arts and humanities essays from the British Academic Written English corpus and generated an equivalent AI-written corpus using ChatGPT3.5. Extracting PVs with an innovative dependency-based method, the authors compared the frequency, diversity, and disciplinary distribution of all the identified PVs, and examined the polysemy, semantic transparency, and collocations of the two PVs with the highest frequency in both corpora. Findings show that human writers used PVs approximately five times more than ChatGPT3.5 and demonstrated twice the PV diversity of ChatGPT3.5. There were also significant sub-disciplinary differences in both corpora, with essays in archaeology and linguistics using significantly fewer PVs than classics and comparative American studies. Regarding PV-specific comparison, humans used PVs with more meanings, more varied transparency, and broader collocations than ChatGPT3.5. Overall, this study revealed that human writing is more flexible, personal, and spontaneous, while AI writing is more formulaic, rigid, and predictable, which provides important implications for education, applied linguistics, and computer science.

 

Keywords

Artificial intelligence, ChatGPT, corpus analysis, writing, multi-word expressions, phrasal verbs