Lexical Expressive Means and Stylistic Devices



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The lexical emotive means and stylistic devices111

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Alba-Juez L, Larina TV (2018) Language and emotion: discourse-pragmatic perspectives. Russ J Linguist 
22(1):9–37. 


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CONCLUSION 
In my conclusion, the analysis of emotive lexemes collected from different 
online media sources made it possible to investigate various emotional expressions 
used in the Internet media. The selection was carried out according to the classical 
criteria of emotivity. The study results showed how quite different and quite mixed 
expressive processes can construct the meaning of the message and influence the 
reader. The texts of the selected online media are characterized by multimodality, 
polyphony, hypertextuality, heterogeneity, and carry bifurcated denotational 
meaning. It was revealed that these forms are predominantly the most expressive 
emotive process. The present study recognized and described emotive lexical units, 
analyzed the different layers of information that make up the emotionality of a 
media text and determine the conditions of the described lexical units’ functioning. 
The pattern markers that are present in the text and influence textual variations 
were also studied. 
To conclude, multimodality was also considered, which characterizes media 
writing. This research shows that expression of feelings and emotions in a digital 
discourse requires special linguistic and extra-linguistic means. Online media are a 
place where people can express themselves freely. Hence, it can be said that media 
favor self-expression. Content writers have the freedom to integrate any expressive 
process. Unlike the traditional written discourse, where affective categories are 
often channeled through lexicon, the digital space is associated with the presence 
of linguistic and extra-linguistic layers. This study identified lexical and linguistic 
means that integrate emotions into the online media texts. Those expressive 
processes are a function of the immediacy and spontaneity of media discourse. 
Basic emotive vocabulary and possible extra-linguistic elements actualized in 
Kazakh media discourse appeared to exploit paraverbal expressions to replace 
expressive means used in face-to-face communication. Such tactics allow 
conveying emotions in written debates. When it comes to digital media texts, it is 
not enough to look at what has been said. Attention should be paid to both 
linguistic and non-linguistic processes. Depending on the purpose of the media 


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text, content writers who seek to influence readers can use emotive lexemes in 
specific ways. Therefore, it is important to examine emotive language from the 
standpoint of linguistics and extra-linguistics. The results of this study can be used 
in teaching aids and courses in philology, psychology, journalism, and semiotics. 
Overall, in this study we focused on how and to which extent affective 
connotations of very basic textual measures at the lexical, inter-lexical, and even 
sublexical level of a poem—that can all be derived from existing normative 
databases—determine the perception of the general affective meaning of poetry in 
a way that proves quantifiable beyond the specific context of a given poem, author, 
or recipient. By applying an exhaustive exploratory regression analysis to a 
comprehensive corpus of poems and their ratings from hundreds of readers, we 
found that a significant amount of variance in discrete and dimensional affective 
ratings of poetry can be accounted for solely by text-based affective measures from 
different levels of processing.
In. conclusion, in all of the presented statistical models—focusing on different 
aspects of the general affective meaning—variance of each rating dimension is 
significantly accounted for by affective properties of several text levels: while the 
lexical one generally explains the biggest amount of variance, further significant 
effects in explaining residual variance are found for the alternative sublexical and 
inter-lexical text levels. Thus, our research brings together previous accounts on 
specific effects of single text levels, showing how they may co-exist each in their 
own right or interact to constitute the complex holistic framework of poetry 
perception. Taken together, the affective properties of text elements from all three 
text levels could account for 43–70% of the variance in the perceived general 
affective meaning of the here utilized poetry and still for 23–48% of the variance 
in further aesthetic and onomatopoetic evaluations of the poems—a substantial 
amount purely accounted for by textual elements which should not be neglected in 
future affective analyses of poetry.


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