Skip to main content
editor@masterjournals.com | Master Journals Journal Home

Current Research Journal of Philological Sciences

Peer Reviewed | Open Access | E-ISSN: 2767-3758
Published Article

DISTINCTIVE LEXICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF LEGAL TERMS IN ENGLISH AND UZBEK LANGUAGES

DISTINCTIVE LEXICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF LEGAL TERMS IN ENGLISH AND UZBEK LANGUAGES

  • Sunnatullo A. Xo’jaqulov
    Lecturer, Karshi state university, Uzbekistan
English legal language Uzbek legal language law

Any social contact, communication and communication, including all legal relations through language it will be wet. It is impossible to express thoughts without language as it is not, the language also forms its expression without flkr can't. Therefore, the right is the basic human needs and if there is a means that ensures and guarantees the interests of language is the main factor in the realization of this right serves as a factor. Any idea, concept, sign, action and attitude related to law is expressed in words, i.e. made up of words, phrases, terms and terms relation to the form of expression, until it falls into the form of expression, social contact, interaction does not occur. The reality and existence of an opinion, especially a legal opinion also appears in the language. Without language, without words, nothing is clear and there will be no ready-made legal opinion. Opinion in legal language words, terms, and certain ones formed with the participation of these formed only through syntactic devices - sentence models and finds its expression in speech: language is a condition for the "existence" of law. That is why language and law serve society social, spiritual-educational and spiritual phenomena, language gives spirit to law. This article discusses some indispensable English and Uzbek legal terms from the linguistic point of view.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

S. Usmonov “Speech culture of the lawyer” Toshkent. 2007

SH. Kochimov “Legislation techniques in the Republic of Uzbekistan (language, style, legal terminology). T.: 1996.

Constitution of the Republic of Uzbekistan. Tashkent. 2007

Walker David, The Oxford Companion to Law, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1980

Crystal D. Investigating English Style. - London, Longman, 1969.

Bázlik, M., & Ambruz, P. “Legal English and its grammatical structure”, Kluwer, Prague, Czech Republic, 2009

Lyons, J. “Linguistic Semantics: An Introduction. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1995