Vol. 2 No. 12 (2022): Volume 02 Issue 12

Vol. 2 No. 12 (2022): Volume 02 Issue 12
Published: 01-12-2022

Articles

21-30 63 34

KHOJA MUHAMMAD PORSO AL-HAFIZ BUKHARI AND HIS WORK “SHARH-I MUSTALOHAT-I SUFIYYA” (REVIEW OF SUFISM REFORMS)

Bahriddin S. Umurzoqov

Khoja Mohammad Porso. The full name of this honorable man is Muhammad ibn Mahmud al-Hafiz Bukhari.


Khoja Muhammad Porso was born in 1345 in Bukhara [1]. “It is said that the nickname “Porso” (devout, pious) was given to him by his teacher Khoja Bahauddin Naqshband. 


The nickname “al-Hafiz” in the blessed names of Khoja Muhammad Porso indicates his high status in the science of hadith. After all, Muhaddis belong to one of the five classes, and the title of “al-Hafiz”, the third rank, is given only to a great scholar who memorized three hundred thousand hadiths with their sanads and their text. Khoja Muhammad Porso was one of those rare khafiza sahibs.

17-20 80 40

METHODOLOGY OF WORKING WITH TERMS IN ENGLISH

Mamadayupova Vasila Shonazarovna

A quarter of the world speaks English and uses it as a means of communication. English is a thousand-year-old language, and it is currently the most spoken and used language in the world. This article provides information about the methodology of working with terms in English.

12-16 94 31

THE LINGUOPOETIC ANALYSIS OF ORNITHONYMS IN KARAKALPAK FOLK AITYS

Nasirova Aizada Pishenbayevna

In the article the linguistic and poetic features of ornithonyms used in the Karakalpak folk aitys were analyzed. Their possibilities of creating an artistic image are studied.

08-11 112 36

THE STUDY OF THE CONCEPT IN LINGUOCOGNITIVE AND LINGUOCULTURAL CONCEPT

Kushmatova Mehrniso

The article deals with the issue of the popular and currently relevant scientific directions as cognitive linguistics and conceptology. The scientific approaches to the study of the key concept of conceptology  are described.

01-07 286 86

ANCIENT COMMON TURKIC WORDS AND MODERN TURKIC LANGUAGES (IN THE EXAMPLE OF UZBEK AND TURKISH DIALECTS)

Odilov Yorqinjon Rakhmonalievich

Modern Turkic languages are equal successors of the ancient Turkic language. Each of these languages has passed its own development steps as a separate language, and today the same process continues too. Such changes were caused by the way of life, social conditions, climate and other peculiarities of the Turkic peoples. However, as the specialists point out, among the Turkic languages, the Yakut language retains most of the elements particular to the ancient Turkic language.  Uzbek, Turkish, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, and Turkmen languages underwent phonetic, lexical-semantic, and grammatical changes after they had emerged as separate languages from Old Turkic language. It is also important for Turkology to compare and draw conclusions about the current state of the ancestor language and its derived languages, such as Uzbek and Turkish, Kyrgyz and Turkish, Uzbek and Kazakh languages.