Criminal Terminology in English Language

Authors

  • Dilorom Ismoilova EFL teacher, Fergana State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51699/ijllal.v2i7.2248

Keywords:

terminology, latent criminology, lexicography, environmental crimes, forest crimes, maritime crimes, tough-on crime, grave crime

Abstract

The article discusses the semantic and structural peculiarities of criminal terminology in English language. The author focuses on the linguacultural features which are not interpreted in other languages directly.

References

British Columbia Government, Glossary of Criminal Justice terms, gov.bc.ca.

Cabre M., Sager J. Terminology: theory, methods, and applications. – Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1999. – P 109.

Cornell Law School, Legal Information Institute, law.cornell.edu.

Maritime crime, Interpol official site. Interpol.int.

Thomas P. Choosing headwords from language-for-special-purposes (LSP) collocations for entry into a terminology data bank (term bank). – Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1993. – P. 43.

United States Constitution, Article III, Section 3.

Ismoilova, D. (2023). Semantic Peculiarities of Legal Terms in English and Uzbek Languages. Best Journal of Innovation in Science, Research and Development, 2(4), 98-101.

Ismoilova, D. (2023). CRIMINAL TERMINOLOGY IN ENGLISH AND UZBEK LANGUAGES. American Journal Of Philological Sciences, 3(03), 53-58.

Ismoilova, D. (2023). PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS IN THE SEMANTIC FIELD OF “CRIME”. Theoretical aspects in the formation of pedagogical sciences, 2(9), 99-101.

Ismoilova, D. (2023, April). LINGUOCULTURAL ANALYSIS OF PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS OF THE SEMANTIC FIELD “CRIME”. In International Conference on Science, Engineering & Technology (Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 17-18).

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Published

2023-07-24

How to Cite

Ismoilova, D. . (2023). Criminal Terminology in English Language. International Journal of Language Learning and Applied Linguistics, 2(7), 63–66. https://doi.org/10.51699/ijllal.v2i7.2248