The article shows that lexico-semantic innovations in the Ukrainian language system of proper names which are characterized by a specific neurophysiological mechanism of formation require in-depth study. The relevance of the article lies in the fact that lexico-semantic word formation used to be mainly considered in the diachronic aspect, which led to little attention to ergonyms and pragmonyms as relevant classes of proper names. The article aims to analyze lexico-semantic innovations in the context of ergonyms and pragmonyms and determine their role in word formation in the system of naming-related tools in the modern Ukrainian language. Research methods include observations, analogies, analysis, synthesis, linguistic description, component analysis, structural-semantic analysis, statistical methods. The article proves that lexico-semantic word formation is the most active and productive way of replenishing the fund of ergonyms and pragmonyms in the Ukrainian language under the conditions of a transition economy. The main types of lexico-semantic word formation are derivational metaphor and derivational metonymy. They enable the formation of both simple and compound lexico-semantic innovations mostly represented by binary word combinations. Including all layers of vocabulary in the scope of such a type of word formation can bring unlimited prospects of its functioning in the future. The international value of the research implies clarifying the role of lexico-semantic word formation in the naming system of modern Ukrainian, describing important fragments of the lexical structure of the Ukrainian language, systematizing modern lexico-semantic naming models, and determining the ways of activating lexico-semantic substitution. For the first time in Ukrainian linguistics, the research analyzes peripheral classes of proper names in various ways, classifies ergonyms by thematic groups and motivational features underlying the naming unit and reveals the specifics of different semantic groups of Ukrainian pragmonyms.
The article has been analyzed the creative heritage of Podilia writer for chil-dren of diff erent ages. Particular attention has been paid to artistic text arrange-ment. There have been considered the texts of diff erent genres and subject mat-ters, artistic means, and approaches with the characters characterized.Children’s literature at the present stage has reached a high level of devel-opment. A lot of writers from the Khmelnytskyi region wrote for children and about children: Mykola Balema, Vasyl Horbatyuk, Mykola Magera, Oksana Radushynska, Hryhoriy Hrapach, Nina Shmurikova, etc. The works have been included in reading books, literature collections, and school textbooks. Nina Shmurikova worked productively in children’s literature, who has writ-ten more than 20 books for children.She wrote for children of preschool and primary school age in the genre of poetry and fairy tales about animals, love for them, good attitude. The young-est readers can «get acquainted» with the variety of colors that surround man in nature. N. Shmurikova also writes about plants: in the collection «Colorful Wonderland» the poet introduces the reader to a fl ower in her poems, sometimes little known («Rudbeckia», «Chornushka», «Lyutin», etc.). In his works, the poet mentions the seasons and natural phenomena. Although the author writes for a certain age group, she raises the theme of patriotism, love for Ukraine, native land, using Ukrainian national and national symbols. Poems about school and school life occupy an equally important place in the poet’s work.N. Shmurikova is one of the best representatives of children’s literature in the Khmelnytskyi region. Her work is highly valued not only by readers but also by society and the state.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.