Vestnik of Northern (Arctic) Federal University.
Series "Humanitarian and Social Sciences"
ISSN 2227-6564 e-ISSN 2687-1505 DOI:10.37482/2687-1505
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Section: Philology Download (pdf, 4.2MB )UDC811.161.1’373.612AuthorsElizaveta O. BorisovaUral Federal University named after the first President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin; prosp. Lenina 51, Yekaterinburg, 620000, Russian Federation; e-mail: elciaborisowa@gmail.com AbstractThis article dwells on some denotations of low and high speed motivated by verbs of physical impact, which an object is subjected to. Thematic groups of verbs are identified that are the most productive in indicating speed. Speed semantics is consistently developing in verbs denoting punching and beating (udaryat’, bit’, zhvarit’, and so on). In the traditional worldview, working fast with consistent, intensive, single-type movements corresponds to the image of high speed, which includes an active subject, an object of impact and a phase action. Within this model we can identify a group of verbs with the initial meaning ‘to flog, to whip’; in this case, sound symbolism acts as an additional motivation. The second source of naming high speed incudes verbs with the meaning of partition (‘to tear, to rend, to cut’). The semantics of slowness is developed in verbs with the meaning of minimal impact (shlyopat’ ‘to slap’, kovyryat’ ‘to pick’, tsarapat’ ‘to scratch’). Moreover, low-speed actions can be indicated by verbs with the meaning of deformation or change of form (mazat’ ‘to smear’, myat’ ‘to rumple’, komkat’ ‘to crumple’) and their derivatives. Words of this semantic type have the motif of concentrating an object in a restricted space due to the impact produced and the motif of its inability to keep its form. It is worth notice that derivatives with the meaning ‘to scratch (oneself)’ can have contrary speed denotations. The semantics of high speed is based on such characteristics of an action as reiteration and intensity and supported by the idea of an itching person’s behaviour. At the same time, scratching can be seen as a substitute for useful activity and, as such, be associated with procrastination. The analysis showed that verbs of destructive physical impact are productive in terms of speed denotation and embody conceptual ideas about speed reflected in the Russian language.Keywordsethnolinguistics, linguistic worldview, Russian dialect vocabulary, Russian folk dialects, semantic derivation, verbs with the meaning of physical impactReferences1. Varbot Zh.Zh. K etimologii nekotorykh slavyanskikh prilagatel’nykh so znacheniem ‘bystryy’ III. Tipy pervichnoy nominatsii [On the Etymology of Some Slavic Adjectives with the Meaning ‘Fast’ III. Types of Initial Naming]. Trubachev O.N. (ed.). Etimologiya. 1994–1996 [Etymology. 1994–1996]. Moscow, 1997, pp. 35–46.2. Varbot Zh.Zh. Slavyanskie predstavleniya o skorosti v svete etimologii (k rekonstruktsii slavyanskoy kartiny mira) [Slavic Ideas of Speed in the Light of Etymology (Reconstructing the Slavic Picture of the World)]. Trubachev O.N. (ed.). Slavyanskoe yazykoznanie [Slavic Linguistics]. Moscow, 1998, pp. 115–129. 3. Varbot Zh. Zh. Issledovaniya po russkoy i slavyanskoy etimologii [Studies on Russian and Slavic Etymology]. Moscow, 2012. 645 p. 4. Boguslavskiy I.M., Iomdin L.L. Semantika bystroty [The Semantics of Speed]. Voprosy yazykoznaniya, 1999, no. 6, pp. 13–30. 5. Varbot Zh.Zh. K etimologii nekotorykh slavyanskikh prilagatel’nykh so znacheniem ‘bystryy’ I (praslavyanskie *skorъjь, *porkъjь) [On the Etymology of Some Slavic Adjectives with the Meaning ‘Fast’ I (the Proto-Slavic *skorъjь, *porkъjь)]. Trubachev O.N. (ed.). Etimologiya. 1988–1990. Moscow, 1993, pp. 44–48. 6. Kustova G.I. Tipy proizvodnykh znacheniy i mekhanizmy yazykovogo rasshireniya [Types of Derived Meanings and Mechanisms of Language Expansion]. Moscow, 2004. 472 p. 7. Jakubowicz M. Drogi słów na przestrzeni wieków. Warszawa, 2010. 8. Eremina M.A. Leksiko-semanticheskoe pole “Otnoshenie cheloveka k trudu” v russkikh narodnykh govorakh: etnolingvisticheskiy aspekt [The Lexico-Semantic Field “Man’s Attitude Towards Work” in Russian Folk Dialects: Etholinguistic Aspect]. Yekaterinburg, 2003. 253 p. 9. Merkulova V.A. Narodnye nazvaniya bolezney [Folk Names for Diseases]. Trubachev O.N. Etimologiya. 1970 [Etymology. 1970]. Moscow, 1972, pp. 143–206. 10. Berezovich E.L., Borisova E.O. Kanitelit’sya, konopatit’sya i razmuzykivat’: semanticheskie modeli medlitel’nosti v russkom yazyke [Kanitelit’sya, konopatit’sya and razmuzykivat’: The Semantic Models of Slowness in the Russian Language]. Tolstaya S.M. Vremya i prostranstvo v yazyke i kul’ture [Time and Space in Language and Culture]. Moscow, 2011, pp. 275–290. |
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