Abstract

The article is devoted to some aspects of the functional specificity of lexical borrowings - neologisms - that have found their vivid reflection in the works and philosophical thought of the European era and, in particular, the English Renaissance, represented by its brightest representatives such as Thomas More, Francis Bacon, John Donne, Shakespeare and others. The authors consider this problem in a synchronous-diachronous cut and in the light of the new socio-political situations of the century of the English Renaissance and in the light of the evolutionary process of the formation of the English nation and the norms of the literary English language, which continued intensively in the 11th century, which led to the further growth and spread of both oral, and written national literary language.

Highlights

  • The USA Journals Volume 03 Issue 05-2021The element of the philosophical thought of the Renaissance is one of those features that especially explicitly associate it with the era that gave birth to the titans of philosophical and literary thought and imagination

  • The role of which Latin played for a long time in the countries of Western Europe, the English national language, which received its literary design in the works of many writers, is increasingly being established

  • Lexical units for linguistic analysis were selected by the method of continuous sampling, which in their semantics relate to words of an abstract philosophical nature

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Summary

Introduction

The USA Journals Volume 03 Issue 05-2021The element of the philosophical thought of the Renaissance is one of those features that especially explicitly associate it with the era that gave birth to the titans of philosophical and literary thought and imagination. Most often this manifested itself in the form of breaking and changing religious ideas, in the struggle of ideas put forward by different directions of the era. These ideas themselves, to one degree or another, touched upon general problems of a philosophical nature, and on a large scale, there was going beyond the religious, theological framework - general questions of being were raised, and often in the traditions of ancient philosophy, which became the dominant trend of the Renaissance [3, p. The role of which Latin played for a long time in the countries of Western Europe, the English national language, which received its literary design in the works of many writers, is increasingly being established

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