Symptomatic Vocabulary with Built-in Emotion

The analysis of symptomatic vocabulary - units denoting a person’s reaction to a certain emotion or the state of a person who is in the grip of emotion is considered in the article. Two classes of symptomatic units are given: (1) units describing the uncontrolled physiological reactions of a person...

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Autor principal: Evgenia R. Ioanesyan
Formato: article
Lenguaje:RU
Publicado: Tsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektov 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/e72ae9e028fa4664907a646e44299b87
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:e72ae9e028fa4664907a646e44299b872021-12-02T07:58:11ZSymptomatic Vocabulary with Built-in Emotion2225-756X2227-129510.24224/2227-1295-2020-7-91-104https://doaj.org/article/e72ae9e028fa4664907a646e44299b872020-07-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.nauka-dialog.ru/jour/article/view/1720https://doaj.org/toc/2225-756Xhttps://doaj.org/toc/2227-1295The analysis of symptomatic vocabulary - units denoting a person’s reaction to a certain emotion or the state of a person who is in the grip of emotion is considered in the article. Two classes of symptomatic units are given: (1) units describing the uncontrolled physiological reactions of a person to emotion, for example, blush with embarrassment, pleasure ; (2) units that describe mental signs that indicate a change in a person’s normal behavior under the influence of strong emotion, for example, to go crazy with fear or jealousy . The focus is on a subclass of symptomatic vocabulary - symptomatic units with built-in emotion. The peculiarity of these units is that they reflect the conceptualization of emotion through a symptom that correlates with this emotion in the picture of the world of a particular language. For example, the verb blush in metaphorical use means a sense of shame ( blush for your actions, for your son ); the French noun stupeur stupor, numbness’ acts as a unit with built-in emotion, indicating a strong surprise. The relevance of the study is determined by the fact that the analysis of symptomatic expressions, especially symptomatic vocabulary with built-in emotion, allows you to identify differences in the conceptualization of emotions in different languages.Evgenia R. IoanesyanTsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektovarticleсемантикапредикаты эмоционального состояния и эмоционального отношениясимптоматическая лексикаметафораязыковая картина мираsemanticspredicates of emotional state and emotional attitudesymptomatic vocabularymetaphorlinguistic picture of the worldSlavic languages. Baltic languages. Albanian languagesPG1-9665RUНаучный диалог, Vol 0, Iss 7, Pp 91-104 (2020)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language RU
topic семантика
предикаты эмоционального состояния и эмоционального отношения
симптоматическая лексика
метафора
языковая картина мира
semantics
predicates of emotional state and emotional attitude
symptomatic vocabulary
metaphor
linguistic picture of the world
Slavic languages. Baltic languages. Albanian languages
PG1-9665
spellingShingle семантика
предикаты эмоционального состояния и эмоционального отношения
симптоматическая лексика
метафора
языковая картина мира
semantics
predicates of emotional state and emotional attitude
symptomatic vocabulary
metaphor
linguistic picture of the world
Slavic languages. Baltic languages. Albanian languages
PG1-9665
Evgenia R. Ioanesyan
Symptomatic Vocabulary with Built-in Emotion
description The analysis of symptomatic vocabulary - units denoting a person’s reaction to a certain emotion or the state of a person who is in the grip of emotion is considered in the article. Two classes of symptomatic units are given: (1) units describing the uncontrolled physiological reactions of a person to emotion, for example, blush with embarrassment, pleasure ; (2) units that describe mental signs that indicate a change in a person’s normal behavior under the influence of strong emotion, for example, to go crazy with fear or jealousy . The focus is on a subclass of symptomatic vocabulary - symptomatic units with built-in emotion. The peculiarity of these units is that they reflect the conceptualization of emotion through a symptom that correlates with this emotion in the picture of the world of a particular language. For example, the verb blush in metaphorical use means a sense of shame ( blush for your actions, for your son ); the French noun stupeur stupor, numbness’ acts as a unit with built-in emotion, indicating a strong surprise. The relevance of the study is determined by the fact that the analysis of symptomatic expressions, especially symptomatic vocabulary with built-in emotion, allows you to identify differences in the conceptualization of emotions in different languages.
format article
author Evgenia R. Ioanesyan
author_facet Evgenia R. Ioanesyan
author_sort Evgenia R. Ioanesyan
title Symptomatic Vocabulary with Built-in Emotion
title_short Symptomatic Vocabulary with Built-in Emotion
title_full Symptomatic Vocabulary with Built-in Emotion
title_fullStr Symptomatic Vocabulary with Built-in Emotion
title_full_unstemmed Symptomatic Vocabulary with Built-in Emotion
title_sort symptomatic vocabulary with built-in emotion
publisher Tsentr nauchnykh i obrazovatelnykh proektov
publishDate 2020
url https://doaj.org/article/e72ae9e028fa4664907a646e44299b87
work_keys_str_mv AT evgeniarioanesyan symptomaticvocabularywithbuiltinemotion
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