CLASSIFICATION OF PARTS OF SPEECH IN RUSSIAN AND UZBEK LANGUAGES

Authors

  • Babaev Eldar Tofik ogli Assistant at the Department of Uzbek Language and Literature Termez Engineering and Technology Institute

Keywords:

Contrastive images, Russian literature, Uzbek literature, cultural identity, thematic analysis, stylistic analysis

Abstract

This article explores the use of contrastive images in Russian and Uzbek literary works, examining how these images reflect cultural, social, and historical contexts. By analyzing selected works from prominent authors in both literatures, the study aims to highlight the similarities and differences in thematic and stylistic approaches to contrastive imagery. The findings contribute to a deeper understanding of the interplay between literature and cultural identity in these two rich literary traditions.

References

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Chulpan A. (1930). Night and Day. Tashkent: State Publishing House of Uzbekistan.

Propp V. (1968). Morphology of the Folktale. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Lotman Y. (1977). The Structure of the Artistic Text. Michigan: University of Michigan Press.

Tolstoy L. (1877). Anna Karenina. Moscow: The Russian Messenger.

Pushkin A. (1831). Eugene Onegin. St. Petersburg: The Contemporary.

Ismailov H. (1997). The Railway. London: Russian Bookshop Publications.

Rahmonov M. (1964). The Call of the Ancestors. Tashkent: Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan.

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Published

2024-07-11

How to Cite

CLASSIFICATION OF PARTS OF SPEECH IN RUSSIAN AND UZBEK LANGUAGES. (2024). INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MODERN DEVELOPMENT OF PEDAGOGY AND LINGUISTICS, 1(6), 182-184. https://universalconference.us/universalconference/index.php/icmdpl/article/view/2190