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Revista Universidad y Sociedad

On-line version ISSN 2218-3620

Abstract

BAGHIR BABASOY, Yegana; ZEYNALOVA, Khazrin; ELMAR SADIGOVA, Nazila  and  MEHRAJ ISMAYILLI, Turkan. Functional semantic character of affirmation in English in the aspect of cognitive linguistics. Universidad y Sociedad [online]. 2025, vol.17, n.3  Epub June 30, 2025. ISSN 2218-3620.

Affirmation is a universal linguistic category that facilitates human communication and cognition by encoding notions of presence, completeness, and certainty. Despite its pervasive role in languages, affirmation has not been extensively examined in mainstream linguistic theory, leading to an oversight of its cognitive richness and multi-dimensional expression. This study bridges this gap by investigating the functional-semantic nature of affirmation in English within a cognitive linguistic framework, emphasizing its role in cognitive coordination and its variable, speaker-centered realization. We employed a multi-modal qualitative methodology-including semantic interpretation, cognitive-contextual analysis, descriptive-structuralist approaches, and discourse analysis. In the research we systematically explore both direct (explicit) and indirect (implicit) expressions of affirmation, supported by cross-linguistic comparisons and real-life examples. Findings reveal that affirmation is a graded, multi-layered phenomenon closely interacting with other linguistic categories. It operates subjectively and epistemically, is speaker-oriented, and manifests at syntactic, morphological, and pragmatic levels. The study also corroborates those affirmations are processed more quickly and effortlessly than negations, reflecting their ontological priority. Theoretically, the research contributes to models of modality and speech acts; practically, it has implications for foreign-language instruction, discourse analysis, and neurolinguistic experimentation. By grounding affirmation in cognitive linguistics-a paradigm uniquely suited to characterize this abstract phenomenon-the study highlights how lived experience and daily speech shape linguistic cognition, affirming its centrality in human thought and communication.

Keywords : Affirmation; Cognition; Self-affirmatives; Gradual affirmation; Direct; Indirect affirmation.

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