Научная статья на тему 'The idiom thematic group “health-disease” with components head, heart, stomach in the Russian and Czech languages'

The idiom thematic group “health-disease” with components head, heart, stomach in the Russian and Czech languages Текст научной статьи по специальности «Языкознание и литературоведение»

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Ключевые слова
ЛИНГВОКУЛЬТУРОЛОГИЯ / СОМАТИЗМЫ / ФРАЗЕОЛОГИЗМЫ / РУССКИЙ ЯЗЫК / ЧЕШСКИЙ ЯЗЫК / СОПОСТАВИТЕЛЬНЫЙ АНАЛИЗ / ПОЛНЫЕ ЭКВИВАЛЕНТЫ / ЧАСТИЧНЫЕ ЭКВИВАЛЕНТЫ / БЕЗЭКВИВАЛЕНТНЫЕ ФРАЗЕОЛОГИЗМЫ / CULTURAL LINGUISTICS / SOMATISM / IDIOMS / RUSSIAN LANGUAGE / CZECH LANGUAGE / BENCHMARKING / FULL EQIVALENTS / PARTIAL EQUIVALENTS / NONEQUIVALENT PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS

Аннотация научной статьи по языкознанию и литературоведению, автор научной работы — Naumova Natalya Alekseevna

In recent decades, due to the intensification of the processes of globalization and the exacerbation of in-tercultural communication problems, cross-cultural studies are becoming ever more relevant. With the help of these studies, scientists are trying to restore fragments of the linguistic picture of the world of particular ethnic groups, to reveal its originality and to define universal traits for cultures of different peoples. National features are fixed the most vividly in the idiomatic language. Studying materials were the Russian and Czech phraseological units related to the thematic group “health-disease,” which includes somatisms: head, heart, stomach (голова, сердце, желудок). In this paper, by comparative analysis of phraseological units of thematic “health-disease” group with somatisms head, heart, stomach (голова, сердце, желудок) in Russian and Czech, the common features and the national originality of the dual “health-disease” concept for Russians and Czechs are revealed. The aim of the study is to identify national peculiarities in perception and verbal realization of one of the basic concepts in two Slavic cultures, the “health-disease” concept. It was achieved by comparing the Russian and Czech phraseological units with somatic components. Non-equivalent phraseological units with soma-tisms head, heart, stomach emphasize the national specificity of the “health-disease” concept. Full equivalents, on the contrary, confirm the universality of this concept in Russian and Czech linguocultures.

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Текст научной работы на тему «The idiom thematic group “health-disease” with components head, heart, stomach in the Russian and Czech languages»

УДК 81:008

ФРАЗЕОЛОГИЗМЫ ТЕМАТИЧЕСКОЙ ГРУППЫ «ЗДОРОВЬЕ-БОЛЕЗНЬ» С КОМПОНЕНТАМИ ГОЛОВА, СЕРДЦЕ, ЖЕЛУДОК В РУССКОМ И ЧЕШСКОМ ЯЗЫКАХ

Наумова Наталья Алексеевна, докторант, ассистент кафедры русского языка и литературы, Университет имени Масарика (Брно, Чешская Республика). E-mail: 114482@mail.muni.cz

В последние десятилетия, в связи с усилением процессов глобализации и обострением проблем межкультурной коммуникации, все более актуальными становятся кросскультурные исследования, с помощью которых ученые пытаются восстановить фрагменты языковой картины мира конкретного этноса, выявить его самобытность и определить универсальные для культур различных народов черты.

Наиболее ярко национальные особенности зафиксированы в идиоматике языка. Актуальность данного исследования состоит также в том, что сопоставительные исследования фразеологизмов с сома-тизмами данной тематической группы, насколько нам известно, до настоящего времени не были проведены.

Материалом для исследования послужили русские и чешские фразеологизмы, относящиеся к тематической группе «здоровье - болезнь», в состав которых входят соматизмы голова/hlava, серд-це/srdce, желудок/zaludek. Были использованы лексикографические данные словарей С. И. Ожегова «Словарь русского языка», В. Д. Стариченка «Большой лингвистический словарь», В. М. Мокиенко, Л. И. Степановой «Cesko-rusky frazeologicky slovník», Е. Мрхачовой «Názvy cástí lidského tela v ceské frazeologii i idiomatice».

В данной статье путем сопоставительного анализа фразеологизмов тематической группы «здоровье-болезнь» с соматизмами голова/hlava, сердце/srdœ, желудок/zaludek выявляются общие черты и национальное своеобразие дуального концепта «здоровье-болезнь» у русских и чехов. Анализ проводится с опорой на теорию эквивалентности фразеологизмов.

Цель исследования - выявление национальных особенностей в восприятии и вербальной реализации одного из базовых концептов в двух славянских культурах - концепта здоровье - болезнь -была достигнута путем сопоставления фразеологизмов русского и чешского языков с компонентами-соматизмами. Безэквивалентные фразеологизмы с соматизмами голова, сердце, желудок подчеркивают национальную специфику концепта здоровье-болезнь. Полные эквиваленты, напротив, подтверждают универсальность данного концепта в русской и чешской лингвокультурах.

Ключевые слова: лингвокультурология, соматизмы, фразеологизмы, русский язык, чешский язык, сопоставительный анализ, полные эквиваленты, частичные эквиваленты, безэквивалентные фразеологизмы.

THE IDIOM THEMATIC GROUP "HEALTH-DISEASE" WITH COMPONENTS HEAD, HEART, STOMACH IN THE RUSSIAN AND CZECH LANGUAGES

Naumova Natalya Alekseevna, Doctoral Candidate, Assistant of the Russian Language Department, Masaryk University (Brno, Czech Republic). E-mail: 114482@mail.muni.cz

In recent decades, due to the intensification of the processes of globalization and the exacerbation of intercultural communication problems, cross-cultural studies are becoming ever more relevant. With the help of these studies, scientists are trying to restore fragments of the linguistic picture of the world of particular ethnic groups, to reveal its originality and to define universal traits for cultures of different peoples.

National features are fixed the most vividly in the idiomatic language.

Studying materials were the Russian and Czech phraseological units related to the thematic group "health-disease," which includes somatisms: head, heart, stomach (голова, сердце, желудок).

In this paper, by comparative analysis of phraseological units of thematic "health-disease" group with somatisms head, heart, stomach (голова, сердце, желудок) in Russian and Czech, the common features and the national originality of the dual "health-disease" concept for Russians and Czechs are revealed.

The aim of the study is to identify national peculiarities in perception and verbal realization of one of the basic concepts in two Slavic cultures, the "health-disease" concept. It was achieved by comparing the Russian and Czech phraseological units with somatic components. Non-equivalent phraseological units with somatisms head, heart, stomach emphasize the national specificity of the "health-disease" concept. Full equivalents, on the contrary, confirm the universality of this concept in Russian and Czech linguocultures.

Keywords: cultural linguistics, somatism, idioms, Russian language, Czech language, benchmarking, full eqivalents, partial equivalents, nonequivalent phraseological units.

Since the late 20th century there is a growing interest among scientists with regard to the problem of the relationship among language, culture and mentality, which is caused by the transition to the anthropological paradigm of language research. While developing cognitive linguistics, antropolinguistics, ethnolinguistics and cultural linguistics, much attention is paid to the study of a language picture of the world of a human beings, groups, and people. Features of learning and information processing methods of mental representation of real phenomena in language, "... an analogy between the man and the world in general and of every nation, to express themselves in the language" (Humboldt, 1984: 349) has been studied by American linguists R. Langacker, J. Lakoff, M. Johnson, L. Talmy and many others. Polish linguists representing the Lublin School have made a significant contribution to the study of the language picture of the world and the Slav nations as a reset of their development of ethnolinguistics (E. Bartminsky, A. Paydzinska, E. Mackiewicz et al.). Studies by Polish scientists have become an inspiration for Czech linguists, especially for representatives of antro-polinguistic studies at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague. In their writings - Czech-researchers Churdova V., I. Vankova, V Vitkovskaya, M. Nagy et al. address the problem of human corporeality, one of the most important pieces of the language picture of the world. Also, modern Russian linguists Apresyan Y., S. Vorkachev, Zaliznyak, Rachel E., N. Alefirenko, V Telia, Maslova et al. repeatedly describe the national picture of the world using folk materials and pointing out human body in their writings.

Phraseological units with somatism components in the aspect of cognitive linguistics and cultural linguistics have become the subject of detailed studies

in the Russian and European linguistics in recent years. The reason for this is that phraseologisms most clearly reflect the specific features of the mentality of the people and the human body, which is the source of the formation of human ideas about the world.

In this article, a description of the use of a method of the comparative analysis of thematic group "health-disease" phraseologisms with the components "the head", "the heart", "the stomach", similarities and differences in the verbal representation is one of the key pieces to the picture of the world of Russian and Czech people. The term phraseologisms refers to the phrases of speech, that consist of two or more words, have a reproducibility, stable structure and an integral meaning (Mokienko, 2008: 12): сердцу не прикажешь, je padly na hlavu.

Professor S. Skorupka in 1958 suggested to divide phraseology into two parts: conventional and natural one. He noted that natural phraseological combinations are common to many languages - they are independent on each other in general conditions of development. Conventional combinations reflect the specific conditions of development of a nation in terms of its material and spiritual culture. (Skorupka, 1958: 123). Modern scholars refer to this classification that changing scientific paradigm in language study, including almost all somatic idioms in the natural category when following Prof. Skorupko model.

The head (голова/hlava) is one of the most important parts of the human body, both in Russian and in Czech. It is a symbol of life, as well as the seat of intelligence, and wisdom: Kolik hlav, tolik rozu-mu. - Сколько голов, столько умов; ma prazdnou hlavu - у него пустая голова; Потерявши голову, по волосам не плачут. In the „Dictionary of Russian mentality" the head is the center and the base

of existence acting as a source of life-giving forces. The head is also a powerful symbol of the unity of unambiguous and equal persons, events or objects. „(DRM, vol. 1, p. 162). The head symbolizes the base, the foundation: глава семьи, ручаться головой. (In the Dictionary of Russian the word "head" has more meanings, e.g. in the Dictionary of the Russian language - Ozhegov's DRL: head /голова/hlava means not only a part of the body /man or animal/, consisting of the skull and face /ранен в голову - shot in the head/, but can also mean a unit of livestock /herd of200 animals - стадо в 200 голов/, or the mind /the man with a head - человек с головой/, the carrier of ideas, views, features /he is a clever brain, он - умная голова/ in a figurative sense of the word. Ultimately, head /глава/ has three meanings: 1. The same as the голова. 2. The head, the chief, the senior position. 3. The dome of the church (Глава делегации. Главы собора.) (DRL by Ozhegov, 118, 122).

The head is also associated with the mental state of a person and feelings of physical pain. For example: Вино веселит, да от вина же и голова болит; Хоть на голове-то густо, а в голове-то пусто; Od smíchu hlava nebolí; Nasadit nékomu strasáka (brou-ka) do hlavy

The heart/srdce/сердце - "the middle, the center, the source and symbol of moral (spiritual) human qualities - love, faith, passion and feelings, emotions, moods - which constitutes spiritual world of a man" (DRM, v. 2, p. 235): ztratit srdce -отдать сердце (кому); lezí to nékomu na srdci jako kámen - лежит на сердце камнем. In the dictionaryof Ozhegov, the word "heart" means the central organ of circulation, and, in a figurative sense, it is a symbol of emotions, feelings, and moods of a man, or it can refer to the most important place of something. Example of the use of the word: Heart disease. He has no heart. Moscow is the heart of our country (DRL by Ozhegov, 634).

In the Russian and Czech languages the word "heart" is often equivalent to the word "soul"/" душа": z celého srdce (z celé duse) - от всего сердца (от всей души). The somatism heart/srdce is often used as a metaphor for the center of something (prímo v srdci Prahy /прямо в сердце Праги) or the nature of man (má zlaté srdce/у него золотое сердце). Whwn referring to the semantic group "health-disease", it is possible to identify the prevalence of meaning "psychic experience, psychic effects" (srdce krvácí/ сердце кровью обливается).

The next somatism is the stomach/zaludek, (a digestive organ in the form of muscular bag. Indigestion. (Ozhegov, 170). The stomach, like the heart and the head, t is also a vital organ, and is associated with the provision of the organism with necessary substances (Má zaludek jako cedník; Oci by jedly, ale zaludek uz nemüze; Желудок не овчина, его не выворотишь; Путь к сердцу мужчины лежит через желудок). However, among the phraseologis-ms of the Russian language the word is found only a few times with the component желудок (stomach). Instead of желудок (stomach), the word belly (colloquial) or abdomen is used. The word желудок/ stomach is not included in the "Dictionary of Russian mentality", published in 2014, in which specifics of Russian culture are recreated and shown through the prism of people's perception of the world. It is replaced by the word живот, which metonymically refers to the concept of the желудок/stomach. Czech phraseologisms with the word zaludek describe both the physical condition of the person (nausea, a feeling of strong hunger, and pain), and emotional discomfort (feelings of deep hostility, stress or far) - mít zaludek az v krku; zvedá se mu zaludek; zaludek mu neslouzí.

Linguists, who study interlanguage phraseological equivalence, developed a set of classifications, built on the ratio of lexical-semantic and grammatical features of matched phraseologisms. For example, V. Mokienko describes the following types of classifications:

1) Full - idioms with the same structure, imagery and figurative meaning;

2) Partial - idioms differ in any component having the same or similar imagery;

3) The relative - idioms differ in imagery, with identical semantics. Images of phraseological units are logically comparable;

4) Phraseology counterparts - have a different structure and imagery with the common stylistic direction and meaning;

5) Non-equivalent idioms have no analogy in the comparable language and contain national identity. (Mokienko, 2008: 37-38).

In this article, all the components of idioms голова/hlava, сердце/srdce, желудок/zaludek, relating to the thematic group "health-disease", are divided into:

- Complete equivalents;

- Partial equivalents;

- Non-equivalent idioms;

Full equivalent refers to phraseological units having the same structure, imagery and figurative

meaning. These phraseological units are most often calques: Chytat se za hlavu - Хвататься за голову).

Through comparative analysis the following full equivalent phraseological units were revealed:

голова/ hlava

Hlava jde kolem Голова идет кругом Dizziness, loss of ability to think clearly (because of tiredness, overloading)

Zaplatit hlavou (za co) Поплатиться головой (за что) To die in the name of sth.

сердце/ srdce

Nosit dite pod srdcem Носить дитя (ребенка) под сердцем To be pregnant

Srdce (nekomu) selhalo Сердце отказало Got heartattack

Rve to (nekomu) srdce Рвет (кому) сердце Heartbreak

желудок/zaludek

- - -

In dictionaries of Russian phraseologisms there are five full equivalents of Czech phraseologisms identified with the components ro^OBa/hlava and cepOTe/srdce, but there are not any equivalents with the component ^e^ygoKzaludek.

Partial equivalents are identical in meaning and stylistic coloring, but they differ in the composition of the lexical, grammatical forms and word order. (eg. Co na srdci, to na jazyku - H.mo na yMe, mo u na

M3bwe.) In this study partial equivalents are divided into free categories:

- Partial equivalents differing in composition components;

- Partial equivalents differing in imagery;

- Particle equivalents differing in word order; Partial equivalents differing in component

composition, are identified as follows:

голова/ hlava

Ma hlavu jako strep У него голова раскалывается About strong headache

Hlava tezka jako cent Тяжелая голова Heaviness in the head, headache (because of tiredness, lack of sleep)

Utrhnout (komu) hlavu Открутить (отвернуть) голову To kill somebody

Nema to v hlave v poradku У него в голове не все в порядке About a strange man

Preskocilo mu v hlave У него в голове помутилось He went mad

сердце/ srdce

Srdce nekomu dotlouklo (чье) сердце остановилось Died

Mit slabé srdce (У кого) слабое сердце Heart disease

Mit zlomené srdce (чье) сердце разбито Suffer from unrequited love

Srdce (nekomu) krvaci Сердце кровью обливается Strong emotional suffering

желудок/ zaludek/

Zaludek mu neslouzi У него проблемы с желудком About the stomachache

Among partial equivalents, differing in component composition, there are mostly idioms with the Czech verb mit (иметь) that are usually translated

Not taking into account the identity of the semantics, partial phraseological equivalents have significant differences in imagery. For example, feeling in trusive worry is connected to the stomach

The presence of partial equivalents that differ in word order is explained by the peculiarities of the syntactic system of the language, particularly by the position of the subject and predicate in the Czech and the Russian proposal.

Phraseological units containing the realities that are not in compared languages usually belong to nonequivalent phraseologisms. This group should

into the Russian language using the personal pronoun with the preposition у (у меня, у него и т.д.). Partial equivalents are variety of imagery:

in the Czech language (Ma koho, co v zaludku), while in Russian - intrusive worry is associated with the liver (кто, что у него в печенках).

Partial equivalents differing in word order:

also include idioms that are created during rethinking of somatism meaning, which is absent in another language. Such idioms are translated using the description: Ездить в Тулу со своим самоваром; свадебный генерал; kde lisky dàvaji dobrou noc.

Non-equivalent idioms related to the thematic group "health-disease" (здоровье-болезнь), are the following:

голова/ hlava

Dela si tezkou hlavu (z ceho) Голова болит (из-за чего) Get troubles about something

Nema vsech pet pohromade У него в голове шариков (винтиков) не хватает Silly, stupid man

Preskocilo mu v hlave Он спятил To be insane

Ma v hlave o kolecko min У него в голове шариков (винтиков) не хватает Foolish person

сердце/ srdce

Delat nekomu tezké srdce Трепать (кому-либо) нервы Hurt somebody

Co oko nevidi, to srdce neboli Меньше знаешь, крепче спишь Out of sight, out of mind.

Otevirat lidska srdce Властелин человеческих душ To have strong psychological influence

желудок/zaludek

Ma (koho, co) v zaludku (кто, что) у него в печенках To pester somebody

Mit zaludek jako na dvorku Голоден как волк To be starving

Zaludek se mi obraci Меня мутит Feeling of vomiting

голова/ hlava

Toci se (komu) hlava Голова кружится (у кого) Dizziness, loss of ability to think clearly (because of tiredness, overloading)

сердце/ srdce

Spadl kamen ze srdce Камень с сердца свалился Emotion release

Mit zaludek jako na vode 1) Stomach problems caused by low-quality food; 2) Status of unrest, fear

Mit zaludek jako kachna 1) Ability to digest any kind of food; 2) To be very patient

Spravit si necim zaludek To eat healthy food to settle stomach

Thus, out of the 30 phraseological units of the thematic group "health-disease" with somatisms голова/hlava, сердце/srdce, желудок/zaludek 5 full equivalents (15 %), 22 partial equivalents (66 %) and 3 nonequivalent phraseologisms (9 %) were found. The most striking differences observed in phraseologisms regarded the component zaludek/желудок. This observation confirms the opinions of some researchers regarding the existence of opposition to the categories of abstract and concrete in the Russian and European mentality (Corina, 2011: 147-164). This tendency of opposition in Europe can be seen in the example of the use of the stomach: in the minds of the Czech people the stomach is connected to the meal intake as a necessary life need, whereas the Russian people vie the stomach in a more abstract way. In the Russian language the word or phrase for anatomically accurate organ of digestion is not specified and is replaced by the word "belly''/живот, брюхо (полный живот; набить брюхо). Among the total equivalents has not been revealed any with component of the желудок/zaludek, at the above-mentioned partial equivalents there were significant differences in the imagery. In the Russian phraseology dictionaries there are no idioms with the word "stomach"/ желудок, thematically related to the semantic group "health-disease".

This analysis shows that phraseological soma-tism with "head", "heart", "stomach" (голова, сердце, желудок), mostly reflects the mental state of the person: nervous stress, emotional upset,

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or experience, a strong fear, etc. Words regarding physical pain or disease of a particular organ of the human body that could lead to dech are also important in both the Russian language and the Czech language.

It should be noted that as a result of the comparative analysis a universality in the functioning of the somatism head, heart, and stomach in the Czech and Russian languages was identified, thus enhancing ones knowledge and understanding of the Czech and Russian national identities. The existence of full and partial idiomatic equivalents is given by the fact that human thinking is universal, and the properties and functions of the parts of the human body analyzed are universal as well. Cultural factors also play an important role, as can be seen in the existence of archetypes (the archetype from Greek - arche - beginning, typos - print, shape, pattern) - the prototype, the first principle, the sample), (Archetype [online]. In http: // dic.academic.ru/dic.nsf/enc_philosophy/105), which are the bases of human perception of the world (up -down, life - death, etc.) and, of course, the commonality of the two Slavic cultures.

Not assuming the identity of the human body, its conceptualization and verbal realization in Russian and Czech world picture show ethnic identity, which is noted in the article on the fragment of the "health-disease". Features of perception of the world of Czech and Russian peoples are related to their historical development, the differences in the rituals, customs and stereotypes of thinking.

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