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Opening a Pandora's Box: Proper Names in English Phraseology
Abstract
This article explores the linguistic-cultural aspects and usage of phraseological
units involving personal and place names in English. The introductory sections
outline the linguistic features of proper names and phraseological units. The
qualitative part of this study provides a list of units belonging to four
phraseological types (idioms, stereotyped similes, binomials, formulae), drawn
from idiom dictionaries. An investigation of the sources of names shows that
the personal and place names involved are historically, socially or culturally
prominent in British culture. Here is noted a predominance of personal over
place names, and within the former, a predominance of male over female names,
and first names over family names, with a number of hypocorisms. The
quantitative part of the study consists of a corpus search of the selected
units in the British National Corpus in order to find their frequency and
distribution across registers. The search reveals that they have very low levels of
occurrence, and are more commonly used in written registers, in particular, in
fiction, journalism and miscellaneous texts.
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