The aim of this study is to compare and contrast the use of hyperbole or exaggeration in spoken Czech and English language. The research is based on comparative approach to two samples accounting for 100 hyperbolic instances in Czech and 100 instances of hyperbole in English. The Czech sample has been randomly excerpted from the oral part of the Czech National Corpus ORAL2008, whereas the English sample has been randomly excerpted from the "spoken context-govern" and "spoken demographic" sections of The British National Corpus. The two samples are subject to analysis. Firstly, the formal realization of hyperbole is examined. Secondly, the occurrences are classified semantically (quantitative versus qualitative hyperbole) and, thirdly, the l...
The author investigates the phenomenon of hyperbole and its roots in the Spanish language. The diffe...
This Diploma Thesis deals with anglicisms and their frequency in the contemporary Czech language. It...
This dissertation examines phraseological patterns in three registers (parliamentary debates, newspa...
The aim of this series is to provide a framework for original studies of english, both present-day a...
This paper focuses on hyperbole, a long neglected form of non-literal language despite its pervasive...
[EN] This paper focuses on hyperbole, a long neglected form of non-literal language despite its perv...
With the help of certain examples, the article recognizes several distinctions and similarities betw...
The article deals with differences between languages, the differences between lexical systems of Eng...
The article studies the pragmatic potential of the hyperbole. German and Russian sport publications ...
The author focuses on quantitatively examining the linguistic other- ing in printed media discourse ...
The thesis aims to provide new information on lexical dialectal variation amongst EFL students. The ...
The present study focuses on English collocations and their testing in Czech learners of English. Si...
The present master's thesis deals with the theme anger in English and Czech phrasemes. The theoretic...
The aim of the current thesis is to ascertain whether there is an effect of Czech analogues on the t...
This thesis presents a contrastive analysis of the English pragmatic markers now and well and their ...
The author investigates the phenomenon of hyperbole and its roots in the Spanish language. The diffe...
This Diploma Thesis deals with anglicisms and their frequency in the contemporary Czech language. It...
This dissertation examines phraseological patterns in three registers (parliamentary debates, newspa...
The aim of this series is to provide a framework for original studies of english, both present-day a...
This paper focuses on hyperbole, a long neglected form of non-literal language despite its pervasive...
[EN] This paper focuses on hyperbole, a long neglected form of non-literal language despite its perv...
With the help of certain examples, the article recognizes several distinctions and similarities betw...
The article deals with differences between languages, the differences between lexical systems of Eng...
The article studies the pragmatic potential of the hyperbole. German and Russian sport publications ...
The author focuses on quantitatively examining the linguistic other- ing in printed media discourse ...
The thesis aims to provide new information on lexical dialectal variation amongst EFL students. The ...
The present study focuses on English collocations and their testing in Czech learners of English. Si...
The present master's thesis deals with the theme anger in English and Czech phrasemes. The theoretic...
The aim of the current thesis is to ascertain whether there is an effect of Czech analogues on the t...
This thesis presents a contrastive analysis of the English pragmatic markers now and well and their ...
The author investigates the phenomenon of hyperbole and its roots in the Spanish language. The diffe...
This Diploma Thesis deals with anglicisms and their frequency in the contemporary Czech language. It...
This dissertation examines phraseological patterns in three registers (parliamentary debates, newspa...