Perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in English promotional discourse: A multi-dimensional linguistic analysis

The article considers the descriptive attribute ‘perfect’ and its derivatives as a commonly used abstraction for creating persuasive emotional texts that encourage potential customers to make purchases and satisfy their needs. The study analyses the objects of reference, semantic field, and syntacti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yulia A. Filyasova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2022-12-01
Series:Training, Language and Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rudn.tlcjournal.org/archive/6(4)/6(4)-04.pdf
_version_ 1811195698461278208
author Yulia A. Filyasova
author_facet Yulia A. Filyasova
author_sort Yulia A. Filyasova
collection DOAJ
description The article considers the descriptive attribute ‘perfect’ and its derivatives as a commonly used abstraction for creating persuasive emotional texts that encourage potential customers to make purchases and satisfy their needs. The study analyses the objects of reference, semantic field, and syntactic functions of the concept through the prism of its functioning in promotional brochures devoted to passenger automobiles belonging to 44 brands. The material included 115 brochures over the previous decade, 22,000 words of minimal contexts and 520 contextual occurrences of ‘perfect’ and its derivatives. The obtained results show that ‘perfect’ tends to reveal two meanings – excellence and compliance to a standard – which historically go back to its original meaning in Latin ‘per factum’ (made thoroughly). Over the period of the decade, there has been a shift from idealisation to practicality in the automotive industry under the influence of economic and environmental factors. The semantic mapping of contextual associative adjectives also indicates that ‘perfect’ is currently more oriented to highlighting practical utility of the cars rather than their excellence. In effect, such practical aspects as technological advancement, technicality, customisation, reliability, comfort, dynamics, style, noiselessness, sound, and price outnumber abstract qualities which express positive impressions, elevation, idealisation, and exaggeration of relevance, by 30%. Semantically, the concept ‘perfection’ follows the promotional principle of combining rational and emotional arguments. ‘Perfect’ is applicable to any car part – be it the exterior, interior or engine. The derivational paradigm has no limitations in syntactic distribution; however, in promotional discourse it typically occurs in nominative structures. The results contribute to the theoretical development of the linguistic worldview through the lens of valuable marketing concepts and can be practically useful in training professional writing skills to students specialising in PR and advertising and learning English for specific purposes.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T00:48:29Z
format Article
id doaj.art-aa66009cd3e64f7e9e0c1c6ad12092ce
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2520-2073
2521-442X
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T00:48:29Z
publishDate 2022-12-01
publisher Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
record_format Article
series Training, Language and Culture
spelling doaj.art-aa66009cd3e64f7e9e0c1c6ad12092ce2022-12-22T03:54:49ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)Training, Language and Culture2520-20732521-442X2022-12-0164506110.22363/2521-442X-2022-6-4-50-61Perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in English promotional discourse: A multi-dimensional linguistic analysisYulia A. Filyasova0Saint-Petersburg State University of EconomicsThe article considers the descriptive attribute ‘perfect’ and its derivatives as a commonly used abstraction for creating persuasive emotional texts that encourage potential customers to make purchases and satisfy their needs. The study analyses the objects of reference, semantic field, and syntactic functions of the concept through the prism of its functioning in promotional brochures devoted to passenger automobiles belonging to 44 brands. The material included 115 brochures over the previous decade, 22,000 words of minimal contexts and 520 contextual occurrences of ‘perfect’ and its derivatives. The obtained results show that ‘perfect’ tends to reveal two meanings – excellence and compliance to a standard – which historically go back to its original meaning in Latin ‘per factum’ (made thoroughly). Over the period of the decade, there has been a shift from idealisation to practicality in the automotive industry under the influence of economic and environmental factors. The semantic mapping of contextual associative adjectives also indicates that ‘perfect’ is currently more oriented to highlighting practical utility of the cars rather than their excellence. In effect, such practical aspects as technological advancement, technicality, customisation, reliability, comfort, dynamics, style, noiselessness, sound, and price outnumber abstract qualities which express positive impressions, elevation, idealisation, and exaggeration of relevance, by 30%. Semantically, the concept ‘perfection’ follows the promotional principle of combining rational and emotional arguments. ‘Perfect’ is applicable to any car part – be it the exterior, interior or engine. The derivational paradigm has no limitations in syntactic distribution; however, in promotional discourse it typically occurs in nominative structures. The results contribute to the theoretical development of the linguistic worldview through the lens of valuable marketing concepts and can be practically useful in training professional writing skills to students specialising in PR and advertising and learning English for specific purposes.https://rudn.tlcjournal.org/archive/6(4)/6(4)-04.pdfdescriptive adjectivesemantic mappingreferentsignificative meaningenglish for specific purposeswriting skillssyntactic collocability
spellingShingle Yulia A. Filyasova
Perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in English promotional discourse: A multi-dimensional linguistic analysis
Training, Language and Culture
descriptive adjective
semantic mapping
referent
significative meaning
english for specific purposes
writing skills
syntactic collocability
title Perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in English promotional discourse: A multi-dimensional linguistic analysis
title_full Perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in English promotional discourse: A multi-dimensional linguistic analysis
title_fullStr Perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in English promotional discourse: A multi-dimensional linguistic analysis
title_full_unstemmed Perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in English promotional discourse: A multi-dimensional linguistic analysis
title_short Perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in English promotional discourse: A multi-dimensional linguistic analysis
title_sort perfection as a concept of hyperbolisation in english promotional discourse a multi dimensional linguistic analysis
topic descriptive adjective
semantic mapping
referent
significative meaning
english for specific purposes
writing skills
syntactic collocability
url https://rudn.tlcjournal.org/archive/6(4)/6(4)-04.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT yuliaafilyasova perfectionasaconceptofhyperbolisationinenglishpromotionaldiscourseamultidimensionallinguisticanalysis