- Issue
- Journal of Siberian Federal University. Humanities & Social Sciences. 2020 13 (12)
- Authors
- Mukhin, Mikhail Yu.; Mukhin, Nikolai Yu.
- Contact information
- Mukhin, Mikhail Yu.: Ural Federal University named after the first President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin (UrFU) Ekaterinburg, Russian Federation; ; ORCID: 0000-0001-8716-9260; Mukhin, Nikolai Yu.: Ural Federal University named after the first President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin (UrFU) Ekaterinburg, Russian Federation; ; ORCID:; 0000-0001-8679-9869
- Keywords
- Lexical statistics; stylometry; idiostyle; lexical compatibility; syntagmatic; lexical bigram
- Abstract
The article presents the project of the Ural Federal University scientists connected with the formalized study of lexical compatibility in Russian classical prose of the 19th century. The study aims to identify idiostylistic characteristics of individual-author syntagmatic. A lexical bigram – a pair of words extracted from one phrase context – is accepted as a unit of compatibility. With the help of their corpus of classical prose (works by Leo N. Tolstoy, Fyodor M. Dostoyevsky, Anton P. Chekhov, Ivan S. Turgenev and Ivan A. Goncharov), the project participants carried out a comparative statistical analysis of lexical bigrams typical for the works of each author and not found in the texts of other writers. A prerequisite for the selection of material is that one of the words constituting a bigram is often used by all authors. Thus, based on the lexical fund common to all authors, the idiostylistical peculiarities of lexical compatibility are revealed. The results of the study are presented on the example of the author’s use of adverbs in the works of Fyodor M. Dostoevsky and comparison of syntagmatic characteristics of these adverbs with their textual embodiment in the works of other four authors. Conclusions are made about stylometric perspectives of formalized research of syntagmatic for idiostylistics and author’s lexicography
- Pages
- 2027–2034
- DOI
- 10.17516/1997-1370-0701
- Paper at repository of SibFU
- https://elib.sfu-kras.ru/handle/2311/137866
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).