Изучение английского языка - не только изучение лексики и грамматики. Очень важно знакомиться со страной изучаемого языка, ее культурой и обычаями.
Цель данной исследовательской работы - выяснить значение красного цвета в английской культуре.
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the_red_colour_in_the_english_culture.doc.docx | 31.9 КБ |
Региональный лингвистический интеллектуальный конкурс
«Шаг в будущее, Электросталь - 2017»
МОУ «СОШ № 16 УИОП »
г.о. Электросталь Московской области
THE RED COLOUR IN THE ENGLISH CULTURE
КРАССНЫЙ ЦВЕТ В КУЛЬТУРЕ АНГЛИИ
Номинация: «социокультурный аспект»
Авторы:
Корунова Лидия
Булыгина Анастасия,
учащиеся 6 класса
Научный руководитель:
Полякова Елена Сергеевна,
учитель английского языка
2017 г.
Contents
Contents | 2 |
Introduction | 3 |
The red colour | 4 |
Red symbols | 5 |
Red in the English language | 8 |
Conclusion | 9 |
Bibliography | 10 |
Introduction
Colours are all around us and they can mean or symbolize different things. Colors play a very important role in our life.
Each colour has its own meaning in different countries and cultures.
We study English. We like this language and we are interested in the English culture.
We decided to know what colour is the most popular in England.
When we think about England, the first we imagine is the red colour.
That’s why the theme of our work is “The red colour in the English Culture”.
The aim of our work is to find out the meaning of the red colour in the English culture.
To gain the aim we solved the following tasks:
The results of the work can be useful both for teachers and for students studying English and trying to understand English culture.
The red colour
Colours are all around us and they can mean or symbolize different things. Colors play a very important role in our life. Each colour has its own meaning in different countries and cultures.
The color red is associated with fire, sun, human blood. This is a very active, exciting, energetic color.
For the English the colour red is a warm and positive as for the most Europeans. The colour associated with the most physical needs. It expresses a strong and powerful energy. It excites the emotions and motivates to take action.
Being the colour of physical movement, the red colour awakens physical life force.
It is also strong-willed and can give confidence to those who are shy or lacking in will power. It intimates passions in people, such as love on the positive side or revenge and anger on the negative. Englishmen are often used red to express love.
So, the positive keywords of red are: action, energy and speed, attention-getting, assertive and confident, energizing, stimulating, exciting, powerful, passionate, stimulating and driven, courageous and strong, spontaneous and determined.
And the negative keywords of red are: aggressive and domineering, over-bearing, tiring, angry and quick-tempered, ruthless, fearful and intolerant, rebellious and obstinate, resentful, violent and brutal.
Red symbols
The colour red takes a special place in English life.
It is almost everywhere in England.
Even Napoleon said: "Red is the color of England. I can't stand it".
St. George is the patron of the country. St. George's day – 23 April in England is considered a national holiday. Many local residents on this day pinned to outerwear red rose – the emblem of their country.
The red flag in the British Navy existed since the 17th century and symbolizes the "call to battle".
The English flag was officially approved in the sixteenth century, and today, the flag of England forms an significant part of the UK flag's design.
The redcoats today are still used for ceremonial reasons and by the Queens/Kings Guard Regiment (the soldiers who protect the British Monarch).
The Buckingham Palace is the London residence of British kings. A lot of rooms are red there.
But the red colour is not the official only. It is everywhere, in the everyday English life.
It is very foggy in England and you can see the red things very well.
In 1912, the Automobile Association put their phone kiosks along the roads.
In 1924 the government had a contest for the best sample of telephone kiosk. The winner was the architect Giles Gilbert Scott.
This design was adopted without reservation, and only subsequently altered in this draft of the London Post Office is the color, which was painted in the booth. The architect planned silver, but the post office chose red, as red telephone boxes can be easily seen even in cloudy English weather.
Booth became famous thanks to its functional design: enclosed cab is designed not only to respect the personal space of the English, but real English, rainy weather, and the red color is easy to spot even in the dense fog.
In 2007, residents of England were asked to choose the main national symbols associated with their state in the world. The honorable first place, the British took the red phone booth.
The post boxes column appeared in 1853. When one or other of them can clearly stamped on the body the monogram of the ruling monarch. For example, VR indicates that the mailbox of the times of Queen Victoria.
The first post boxes were green. This color was used for the drawers did not stand out in the landscape. However, people started noticing problems with their search. The post was looking for alternatives, and eventually chose a bright red
color. The most popular established design was proposed by architect John Penfold, who for years worked on the invention of the most suitable shape for the column and developed nine different species. A new colour was introduced in 1874 and since then, the "pillars" with the post remained red.
The red colour is the colour of different holidays.
On Friday 31 July 1925 the British government agreed to the demands of the Miners Federation of Great Britain to provide a subsidy to the mining industry to maintain miners' wages. The Daily Herald called this day Red Friday; a union defeat four years earlier had been called "Black Friday". It is a holiday and an important date in the British history.
“Red” in the English language
The word red is very common for the English language. The attitude of the British to the color red is also reflected in language idoms, proverbs and sayings.
The idiom “the red carpet” means special treatment that is given to an important person when they go somewhere. “Roll out the red carpet” is to give an important person a special welcome.
“Red tape” is about official rules that do not seem necessary and make things happen very slowly, bureaucratic paperwork. “Cut through the red tape” means to come basic point.
“Catch someone red-handed” to discover someone doing something illegal or wrong. “Red-hot” means extremely hot, very exciting or successful. “Go beet(root) red” or “go as red as a beet(root)” is to become very red in the face, usually because you are embarrassed.
Also, when one's ears are red from embarrassment Englishmen say “ears are red”, “red in the face” – when someone is embarrassed.
“Be in the red” is to owe money to a bank, to be in debt; “out of the red” means “out of debt”. “Be like red rag to a bull” is used if a statement or an action is like a red rag to a bull, it makes someone very angry. The idiom “not a red cent” means no money at all. “A red eye” means a flight that leaves late at night and arrives early the next morning.
The idiom “a red herring” is about something that takes people's attention away from the main subject being talked or written about.
About special days Englishmen say “red-letter days”. “Be on full / red alert” - if soldiers are on full alert, they know that a situation is dangerous and are prepared to act immediately if necessary. “Red as a cherry” and “red as a poppy” are equal to bright red.
The expression “red as a rose” means intensely red, “red as a ruby” - deep red, “red as blood” - deep red.
Englishmen say “red mist” if someone sees red or the red mist, they lose their temper and self-control completely. The expression “to be shown the red card” means “to be dismissed from job”, “a red neck” means an ignorant, insensitive person. “Red ticket item” means a special item. About people who are usually hot-tempered and high-spirited in England people say “red-headed”.
So, there are a lot of idioms with the concept “red” in the English language.
Conclusion
In the English culture the red colour is really of great importance. You can see the red colour almost everywhere in England. The official and non-official symbols of England are red. A lot of the idioms with the concept “red” are widely used for description of different phenomena and situations in human life in England. It shows how this concept is important for English speakers. The red colour is the colour of England.
Bibliography
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