Conţinutul numărului revistei |
Articolul precedent |
Articolul urmator |
656 6 |
Ultima descărcare din IBN: 2023-07-25 10:42 |
Căutarea după subiecte similare conform CZU |
81’373.613 (3) |
Linguistics and languages (4990) |
SM ISO690:2012 RUSU, Alexandra. The derivational paradigm of the cosmetological terminology. In: Intertext , 2017, nr. 3-4(43-44), pp. 100-105. ISSN 1857-3711. |
EXPORT metadate: Google Scholar Crossref CERIF DataCite Dublin Core |
Intertext | |||||
Numărul 3-4(43-44) / 2017 / ISSN 1857-3711 /ISSNe 2345-1750 | |||||
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CZU: 81’373.613 | |||||
Pag. 100-105 | |||||
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Nowadays, there are many studies that reveal all peculiarities of the terminology in general – beginning with Wüster Eugene, the “father” of terminology, till now. Despite of the fact that it is a specific and integrative part of the lexicon of any language, the terminology represents a branch apart with its internal rules, “connections” and features. In the context of globalization process that implies the international cooperation in many special fields, the standardization feature of terminology is very helpful facilitating the transfer of information between professionals that are speaking different languages and represent different cultures. In this order of ideas, referring to the main subject of our investigation the specialized terms of cosmetology, we would like to underline the fact that it is a field common for many countries, providing more or less similar services and products using a internationalized terms. Partially this fact could be explained by the interconnection and/or merging of many related fields such as chemistry, medicine, anatomy, dermatology, aesthetics, botany etc., that bring with them the linguistic corpus forming a variety of derivational and compound specialized words, abbreviations, specialized “phraseological units” etc. We decided to take under the magnifying glass the derivational paradigm of the terminology of the cosmetological field supposing that numerous cosmetological terms have lexical roots and affixes borrowed from Latin and Greek (antioxidant, subcutaneous, dermatitis, exfoliation, (d)epilation, epidermis, abdominal, hypoallergenic etc.). |
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Cuvinte-cheie derivatives, cosmetological terminology, affixes, Latin, lexical roots, Greek. |
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