Moscow versus Saint Petersburg: assessment of the capitals in the lexical meanings of the occasional derivatives
... values. The peculiarity of the formation of these words built according to the model of the past passive participle adds the element of ‘inadequacy’ and ‘craziness’ to the meanings of both words. While in the word ‘moskvanutyj’ this connotation is connected with condemnation, even with profanity, the words ‘peterburgnutyj’ and ‘piternutyj’ are more often used to express admiration.
Russian language, occasional derivatives, language norm, corpus linguistics, past passive ...
Visual language of the city: a case study of the visual perception of third places (the case of Nizhny Novgorod)
... appealing. The proposed conceptual framework may serve as a basis for a broader analysis of visual communication within the urban context.
third place, visual communication, urban landscape, historical memory, local identity, temporal context, cultural connotation
90—108
10.5922/2225-5346-2025-4-5