Adjectives with the Meanings ‘Long’ and ‘Short’ in Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions: a Case Study of the Buryat Language and Dictionaries

The paper examines adjectives denoting horizontal and vertical size (‘long’ and ‘short’) in the Buryat language and Russian-Buryat dictionaries. The analysis shows that adjectives to define objects in horizontal orientation are fewer than those dealing with vertical orientation. At the same time,...

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Main Authors: Babasan D. Tsyrenov, Anna T. Abayeva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Российской академии наук, Калмыцкий научный центр 2019-05-01
Series:Монголоведение
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mongoloved.kigiran.com/jour/article/view/119/87
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author Babasan D. Tsyrenov
Anna T. Abayeva
author_facet Babasan D. Tsyrenov
Anna T. Abayeva
author_sort Babasan D. Tsyrenov
collection DOAJ
description The paper examines adjectives denoting horizontal and vertical size (‘long’ and ‘short’) in the Buryat language and Russian-Buryat dictionaries. The analysis shows that adjectives to define objects in horizontal orientation are fewer than those dealing with vertical orientation. At the same time, adjectives of vertical orientation (oodon and ohor) are distinguished by exclusive compatibility characteristics. The adjective oodon characterizes objects hanging down, such as tails, lower hems, bottom edges of trousers, shoulder weapons, etc.; and the word ohor defines vertical, upwardsdirected objects, e.g., grass, rocks, etc. The dominant adjectives in synonymic chains of both orientations coincide and serve as general definitions of certain qualities or characteristics of an object (uta and bogony). For deeper understanding of peculiarities inherent to these adjectives, the paper examines no pictorial, stylistically loaded adjectives since those are often essentially evaluative and do not act as object definers directly; the single exception examined being the somewhat evaluative adjective unzhagar ‘long’ containing semes of both horizontal and vertical orientations. It defines objects stretched in perspective, as well as ones that hang down or face upwards. As for the analyzed adjectives, in both the synonymic chains the adjectives bogony and oodon ‘short’ are not used in a figurative sense, while uta and ohor are active enough in this function. This fact, apparently, attests to that those are basically used in their direct, utilitarian function ― determination of physical parameters of an object used in practice and economic activities. So, a different story is that of the word ohor which, when combined with ukhaan, bodol, naγan, express figurative meanings (ohor ukhaan ‘dull mind’, ohor γanaan ‘short-sighted’, ohor naγan ‘short life / short century’). Some of these adjectives are used to form compound nouns and adjectives, e.g., uta honshoor ‘bittern’, ohor γüül ‘tailbone’, oodon buu ‘carbine’, oodon terge ‘uniaxial cart’, oodon ümden ‘shorts’, etc. Distinction between Buryat (and other Mongolic) synonyms in vertical orientation requires a deeper analysis based on their etymologies, and in lexicographical practice – accompaniments in the form of semantic explanations.
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spelling doaj.art-1c2f969d5a7a4e7f936181f25085d91b2022-12-21T18:48:39ZengРоссийской академии наук, Калмыцкий научный центрМонголоведение2500-15232019-05-0111225727110.22162/2500-1523-2019-2-257-271Adjectives with the Meanings ‘Long’ and ‘Short’ in Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions: a Case Study of the Buryat Language and DictionariesBabasan D. Tsyrenov0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8928-3232Anna T. Abayeva1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2048-6875Institute for Mongolian, Buddhist and Tibetan Studies, Siberian Branch of the RAS Institute for Mongolian, Buddhist and Tibetan Studies, Siberian Branch of the RASThe paper examines adjectives denoting horizontal and vertical size (‘long’ and ‘short’) in the Buryat language and Russian-Buryat dictionaries. The analysis shows that adjectives to define objects in horizontal orientation are fewer than those dealing with vertical orientation. At the same time, adjectives of vertical orientation (oodon and ohor) are distinguished by exclusive compatibility characteristics. The adjective oodon characterizes objects hanging down, such as tails, lower hems, bottom edges of trousers, shoulder weapons, etc.; and the word ohor defines vertical, upwardsdirected objects, e.g., grass, rocks, etc. The dominant adjectives in synonymic chains of both orientations coincide and serve as general definitions of certain qualities or characteristics of an object (uta and bogony). For deeper understanding of peculiarities inherent to these adjectives, the paper examines no pictorial, stylistically loaded adjectives since those are often essentially evaluative and do not act as object definers directly; the single exception examined being the somewhat evaluative adjective unzhagar ‘long’ containing semes of both horizontal and vertical orientations. It defines objects stretched in perspective, as well as ones that hang down or face upwards. As for the analyzed adjectives, in both the synonymic chains the adjectives bogony and oodon ‘short’ are not used in a figurative sense, while uta and ohor are active enough in this function. This fact, apparently, attests to that those are basically used in their direct, utilitarian function ― determination of physical parameters of an object used in practice and economic activities. So, a different story is that of the word ohor which, when combined with ukhaan, bodol, naγan, express figurative meanings (ohor ukhaan ‘dull mind’, ohor γanaan ‘short-sighted’, ohor naγan ‘short life / short century’). Some of these adjectives are used to form compound nouns and adjectives, e.g., uta honshoor ‘bittern’, ohor γüül ‘tailbone’, oodon buu ‘carbine’, oodon terge ‘uniaxial cart’, oodon ümden ‘shorts’, etc. Distinction between Buryat (and other Mongolic) synonyms in vertical orientation requires a deeper analysis based on their etymologies, and in lexicographical practice – accompaniments in the form of semantic explanations.https://mongoloved.kigiran.com/jour/article/view/119/87lexicographydictionaryadjectivesburyat languagerussian languagesizelongshort
spellingShingle Babasan D. Tsyrenov
Anna T. Abayeva
Adjectives with the Meanings ‘Long’ and ‘Short’ in Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions: a Case Study of the Buryat Language and Dictionaries
Монголоведение
lexicography
dictionary
adjectives
buryat language
russian language
size
long
short
title Adjectives with the Meanings ‘Long’ and ‘Short’ in Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions: a Case Study of the Buryat Language and Dictionaries
title_full Adjectives with the Meanings ‘Long’ and ‘Short’ in Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions: a Case Study of the Buryat Language and Dictionaries
title_fullStr Adjectives with the Meanings ‘Long’ and ‘Short’ in Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions: a Case Study of the Buryat Language and Dictionaries
title_full_unstemmed Adjectives with the Meanings ‘Long’ and ‘Short’ in Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions: a Case Study of the Buryat Language and Dictionaries
title_short Adjectives with the Meanings ‘Long’ and ‘Short’ in Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions: a Case Study of the Buryat Language and Dictionaries
title_sort adjectives with the meanings long and short in horizontal and vertical dimensions a case study of the buryat language and dictionaries
topic lexicography
dictionary
adjectives
buryat language
russian language
size
long
short
url https://mongoloved.kigiran.com/jour/article/view/119/87
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