LEXICOLOGY 1. Principles of general linguistics 2. The structure of English words 3. Derivation as a major word-building pattern 4. Compounding. Classification of compounding 5. Shortening and abbreviation 6. Conversion. Types of conversion 7. Minor types (доп. способы) of word-building 8. The problem of meaning 9. Types of meaning 10. Change of meaning 11. Transfer of meaning (metaphor‚ metonymy) 12. Polysemy or plurality of meaning 13. Homonyms
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Questions 1. Lexicology as a subdivision of linguistics. Its object and tasks. 2. Subdivisions of lexicology. 3. Tasks of contrastive lexicology. Its theoretical and practical value. 4. The IC analysis in lexicological studies. 5. Distributional analysis in lexicological studies. 6. Transformational procedures in lexicological studies. 7. Componental analysis in lexicological studies. 8. Statistical methods of analysis in lexicological studies . 9. Contrastive analysis in lexicological
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LECTURES ON ENGLISH LEXICOLOGY INTRODUCTION The book is intended for English language students at Pedagogical Universities taking the course of English lexicology and fully meets the requirements of the programme in the subject. It may also be of interest to all readers‚ whose command of English is sufficient to enable them to read texts of average difficulty and who would like to gain some information about the vocabulary resources of Modern English (for example‚ about synonyms and antonyms)
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My opinion on why we study English lexicology How many words are there in the modern English language? There is no single sensible answer to this question. It is impossible to count the number of words in a language‚ because it is so hard to decide what counts as a word. But it is widely accepted by linguists that there are one million or so English words now. If so‚ a subject is needed to study and analyze modern English vocabulary. Thus‚ English-lexicological learning is important in some aspects
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to reject‚ v.)‚ of different stylistic characteristics (e. g. man‚ n. — chap‚ n. — bloke‚ n. — guy‚ n.). Consequently‚ the main problems of paradig-matic studies are synonym‚ antonymy (see Ch. 10)‚ functional styles. Phraseology is the branch of lexicology specialising in word-groups which are characterised by stability of structure and trans-ferred meaning‚ e. g. to take the bull by the horns‚ to see red‚ birds of a feather‚ etc. One further important objective of lexicological studies is the study
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Г.Б. Антрушина‚ О.В‚ Афанасьева‚ Н.Н. Морозова What Is a Word? What Is Lexicology? What’s is a name? that which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet... (W. Shakespeare. Romeo and Juliet‚ Act II‚ Sc. 2) These famous lines reflect one of the fundamental problems of linguistic research: what is in a name‚ in a word? Is there any direct connection between a word and the object it represents? Could a rose have been called by "any other
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1. Lexicology as a science Linguistics is the scientific study of language. There are broadly three aspects to the study‚ which include language form‚ language meaning‚ and language in context. Linguistics includes: Phonetics‚ Phonology‚ Morphology‚ Syntax‚ Semantics‚ Pragmatics‚ Discourse analysis‚ Stylistics‚ Semiotics. Lexicology as a branch of linguistics has its own aims and methods of scientific research‚ its basic task being a study and systematic description of vocabulary in respect to its
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’archaic’‚ ’slang’‚ ’literary’). The manner of arrangement chosen to present the list of data is by- phraseological type and syntactic structure. Phraseology appeared in the domain of lexicology and is undergoing the process of segregating as a separate branch of linguistics. The reason is clear- lexicology deals with words and
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UKRAINE Kyiv National Linguistic University Report Paper in Comparative Lexicology of the English and Ukrainian Languages Lecture 1. COMPARATIVE LEXICOLOGY IN THE SYSTEMIC STRUCTURE OF LANGUAGE Kulyk AnastasiiaGroup ПА09-12 Translators`/Interpreters` Department Research supervisor: V. G. NikonovaProfessor‚ Doctor of Philology Kyiv 2014 PLAN INTRODUCTION 1. DIFFERENT TIPES OF LEXICOLOGY: GENERAL AND SPECIAL‚ HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE
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1. Lexicology as a branch of linguistics. Subject matter. Links with other branches. Problems. Lexicology is a science about words. It studies the vocabulary of the language which consists of words and word combinations. The subject matter of lexicology is separate words‚ their morphological and semantic structure‚ and the vocabulary of the language‚ which includes words‚ word combinations‚ their origin‚ development and current use. Lexicology has lots of connections with other branches which also
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