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Kovalenko_lexicology

Name index

Андрусяк, Ірина Василівна

88

Апресян, Юрій Деренікович

52, 91

Бялик, Василь Дмитрович

88

Верба, Лідія Георгіївна

56, 57

Виноградов, Віктор Володимирович

89, 161

Вихованець, Іван Романович

21

Гак, Володимир Григорович

32

Жарковська, Інна Валеріївна

72

Жирмунський, Віктор Максимович

20

Зацний, Юрій Антонович

88, 106, 110, 120

Земская, Олена Андріївна

89

Каращук, Петро Миколайович

88, 89, 90, 91,92, 147

Клименко, Надія Федорівна

91

Кубрякова, Олена Самойлівна

86, 92, 149

Кунін, Олександр Володимирович

158, 161, 162

Левицький, Андрій Едуардович

88, 146, 148

Семчинський, Станіслав Володимирович

141, 149

Смирницккий, Олександр Іванович

90, 159

Тараненко, Олександр Онисимович

21

Телія, Вероніка Миколаївна

86, 87, 88, 158

Улуханов, Ігор Степанович

89

Уфімцева, Анна Анфілофіївна

86, 141

Щерба, Лев Володимирович

20

Шиманович, Ганна Миколаївна

88

Шмельов, Дмитро Миколайович

20

Aquinas, Thomas

31

Aristotle

30

Augustine, St.

30

Ballard, J.G.

173

Bally, Charles

159

Bloomfield, Leonard

20

Browne, Sir Thomas

173

Burgess, Gelett

171

Carroll, Lewis

132, 173

Cawdrey, Robert

186

Chaucer, Geoffrey

177

Cooper, Alan

60

Coupland, Douglas

173

Cruse, D.A.

52, 53, 62, 65

Crystal, David

33, 80, 82, 121, 131, 135, 153, 155, 169, 175

Eble, Connie

45

Egan, R.F.

67

Fromkin, Victoria

79

Galéas, C.G.

139

Gibson, William

173

Gläser, Rosemarie

158

Grote, David

177

Heinlein, Robert A.

173

Heller, Joseph

173

Jeffers, Robert J.

40

Jespersen, Otto

162

Johnson, Samuel

186

Knigh, Thomas

186

Lawrence, David H.

105

Lyons, John

62, 65

Miller, G.A.

21

Muehleisen, Victoria

66, 67

Murray, James

187

Orwell, George

107, 173

Peirce, Charles

32, 139

Pustejovsky, James

54

Ravin, Y.

50, 52

Ringer, Jeffrey

31

Robins, Robert H.

50

Rodman, Robert

79

Saussure, Ferdinand de

32

Scott, Walter

174

Thackeray, William

174

Trask, Larry

137

Vonnegut, Kurt

173

Wain, John

74

Webster, Noah

187

1 Etymological materials in this chapter are from: Harper D. Online Etymology Dictionary / Douglas Harper [Електронний ресурс]. - http://www.etymonline.com/ - © November 2001.

2 From: Hornby A.S. Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary / Albert Sidney Hornby. – Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.

3 This and the examples below in this chapter are from: British National Corpus [електронний ресурс]. - http://corpus.byu.edu/bnc/ and Corpus of Contemporary American English [електронний ресурс]. - http://www.americancorpus.org/

4 These and further illustrations in this chapter are from: Wain, J. The Life Guard / John Wain. – NY:Viking, 1972. – 172 P.

5 “Two-Ton Tessie from Tennessee” was a signature song of Teresa “Tessie” O'Shea (13 March 1913 – 21 April 1995), a Welsh entertainer and actress, who was quite a large woman herself.

6 Lawrence H.D. Women in Love. – London: Penguin Books, 1996. – p.20.

7 The examples retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ASearch&redirs=1&search=-ocracy&fulltext=Search&ns0=1 22:21, 10 February 2010.

8 L. Carroll. Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There (1871).

9 http://www.stpaulsmensclub.org/

10 "Hierarchy shows a similar, though more pronounced, deterioration. Originally applied to an order or a host of angels from the fourteenth century, it has steadily moved down the scale of being, referring to 'a collective body of ecclesiastical rulers' from c. 1619, from whence the similar secular sense develops c.1643 (in Milton's tract on divorce). . . . Today one frequently hears of 'the party hierarchy,' 'business hierarchies,' and the like, denoting only the top of the hierarchy, not the whole order, and conveying the same nuances of hostility and envy implied in elite."

(Geoffrey Hughes, Words in Time: A Social History of the English Vocabulary, Basil Blackwell, 1988) from http://grammar.about.com/od/pq/g/pejorterm.htm

11 Syntagmatic, as opposed to the paradigmatic (or vertical) relations.

12 It is quite possible, in fact, to describe a woman as handsome. However, this implies that she is not beautiful at all in the traditional sense of female beauty, but rather that she is mature in age, has large features and a certain strength of character. Similarly, a man could be described as beautiful, but this would usually imply that he had feminine features. Calling a man pretty is most often done perjoratively to suggest effeminacy. (from http://esl.fis.edu/grammar/easy/colloc.htm)

13 Of mice and men is in fact a double quotation, as it was also used by John Steinbeck as the title of a novel.

14 Rowling J.K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows / Joan K. Rowling. – Bloomsbery, 1997. – 607 p.

15 Sentences from: Rowling J.K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows / Joan K. Rowling. – Bloomsbery, 1997. – 607 p.

16 Sentences from: Rowling J.K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows / Joan K. Rowling. – Bloomsbery, 1997. – 607 p.

17 Sentences from: Rowling J.K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows / Joan K. Rowling. – Bloomsbery, 1997. – 607 p.

18 Sentences from: Rowling J.K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows / Joan K. Rowling. – Bloomsbery, 1997. – 607 p.

19 Sentences from: Rowling J.K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows / Joan K. Rowling. – Bloomsbery, 1997. – 607 p.

20 Sentences from: Rowling J.K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows / Joan K. Rowling. – Bloomsbery, 1997. – 607 p.