“Threat” in Russian–A Linguistic Perspective
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/32408Date
2023-01-08Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The present study explores a frequent concept in modern media discourse,
namely “threat,” based on a corpus analysis of the two Russian nouns
groza and ugroza from 1800 to 2020. We show that the two words share a
network of submeanings, but that they have different centers of gravity in
the network. We identify four submeanings and suggest that the
distribution of the two words has changed over time. In present-day
Russian, groza is dominant in the meaning ‘thunderstorm,’ while ugroza
describes a wide variety of threats. Our analysis of origins of threats and
affected entities has also revealed a diachronic development, whereby
origins of threat change from concrete physical threats via military threats
to more generalized dangers, such as nuclear and environmental disasters,
diseases, and terrorism, while entities affected by these threats undergo a
change from concrete persons via communities and states to the entire
planet.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisCitation
Nesset t, Makarova A. “Threat” in Russian–A Linguistic Perspective. Scando-Slavica. 2023;69(2)Metadata
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