PEJORATIVE SENSE DEVELOPMENT DUE TO A WORD SHIFTING FROM DIALECTS TO COMMON USE
The article considers the lexical units of Modern British English which have entered the common use from regional and social dialects. The aim of the study is to find out whether regional and social lexemes undergo additional pejorative sense development while shifting from non-standard language for...
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Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
2016-12-01
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Online Access: | http://journals.rudn.ru/polylinguality/article/viewFile/14345/13484 |
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doaj-bf1d65d17e934fc1a2dbacdb52f5264e2020-11-25T00:07:58ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)Polylinguality and Transcultural Practices2618-897X2618-89882016-12-010391714127PEJORATIVE SENSE DEVELOPMENT DUE TO A WORD SHIFTING FROM DIALECTS TO COMMON USET V Nikitsenka0Vitebsk State University named after P.M. MasherovThe article considers the lexical units of Modern British English which have entered the common use from regional and social dialects. The aim of the study is to find out whether regional and social lexemes undergo additional pejorative sense development while shifting from non-standard language forms to standard British English. The data for the research has been extracted from “The Oxford English Dictionary”. It is stated that within the period of the XVI-XX cc. the regional dialects of Great Britain didn’t contribute a lot to enriching pejorative lexis. The lexemes from the social dialects entered the Standard English language mostly within the period of the XIX-XX cc. with the tendency to their growth in the second half of the XX c. The conclusion is made that in most cases regional and social units have functioned as pejorative means before they enter the common use so that they don’t acquire additional pejorative sense development in the standard language.http://journals.rudn.ru/polylinguality/article/viewFile/14345/13484standard languageregional dialectssocial dialectsBritish Englishpejorative meaningstylistic label |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
T V Nikitsenka |
spellingShingle |
T V Nikitsenka PEJORATIVE SENSE DEVELOPMENT DUE TO A WORD SHIFTING FROM DIALECTS TO COMMON USE Polylinguality and Transcultural Practices standard language regional dialects social dialects British English pejorative meaning stylistic label |
author_facet |
T V Nikitsenka |
author_sort |
T V Nikitsenka |
title |
PEJORATIVE SENSE DEVELOPMENT DUE TO A WORD SHIFTING FROM DIALECTS TO COMMON USE |
title_short |
PEJORATIVE SENSE DEVELOPMENT DUE TO A WORD SHIFTING FROM DIALECTS TO COMMON USE |
title_full |
PEJORATIVE SENSE DEVELOPMENT DUE TO A WORD SHIFTING FROM DIALECTS TO COMMON USE |
title_fullStr |
PEJORATIVE SENSE DEVELOPMENT DUE TO A WORD SHIFTING FROM DIALECTS TO COMMON USE |
title_full_unstemmed |
PEJORATIVE SENSE DEVELOPMENT DUE TO A WORD SHIFTING FROM DIALECTS TO COMMON USE |
title_sort |
pejorative sense development due to a word shifting from dialects to common use |
publisher |
Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) |
series |
Polylinguality and Transcultural Practices |
issn |
2618-897X 2618-8988 |
publishDate |
2016-12-01 |
description |
The article considers the lexical units of Modern British English which have entered the common use from regional and social dialects. The aim of the study is to find out whether regional and social lexemes undergo additional pejorative sense development while shifting from non-standard language forms to standard British English. The data for the research has been extracted from “The Oxford English Dictionary”. It is stated that within the period of the XVI-XX cc. the regional dialects of Great Britain didn’t contribute a lot to enriching pejorative lexis. The lexemes from the social dialects entered the Standard English language mostly within the period of the XIX-XX cc. with the tendency to their growth in the second half of the XX c. The conclusion is made that in most cases regional and social units have functioned as pejorative means before they enter the common use so that they don’t acquire additional pejorative sense development in the standard language. |
topic |
standard language regional dialects social dialects British English pejorative meaning stylistic label |
url |
http://journals.rudn.ru/polylinguality/article/viewFile/14345/13484 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tvnikitsenka pejorativesensedevelopmentduetoawordshiftingfromdialectstocommonuse |
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1725417489894998016 |