COMPARATIVE LINGUISTIC FEATURES OF ENGLISH AND UZBEK PERSONAL NAMES
Authors/Creators
- 1. PhD, Uzbekistan State World Languages University
- 2. Master's student, Uzbekistan State World Languages University
Description
This article examines a comprehensive investigation of the linguistic features of human names in Uzbek and English languages. Anthroponyms, in contrast to common terminology, convey the speakers' deeper worldview by preserving old cultural layers, social customs, and religious influences. The study highlights the distinct developmental routes and cultural symbolism of the English and Uzbek naming systems by comparing and contrasting their structural, semantic, and sociolinguistic characteristics. The findings show that Uzbek names exhibit obvious meanings and intricate morphological patterns based on agglutinative principles, whereas English names tend to be structurally simple but historically layered reflecting diverse cultural and linguistic influences.
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Additional details
References
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- Crystal, D. (2003). The Cambridge encyclopedia of the English language. Cambridge University Press.
- Gardiner, A. (1954). The theory of proper names. Oxford University Press.
- Hanks, P., Hardcastle, K., & Hodges, F. (2016). A dictionary of first names. Oxford University Press.
- Ismoilov, A. (2019). O'zbek antroponimiyasi asoslari. Toshkent: O'zbekiston Milliy Ensiklopediyasi.