Key words: discourse, communicative discourse, communication, cognitive aspect, linguistic studies
Summary
This article deals with the linguistic-communicative aspect of discourse. It is noted in the article that G.A. Orlov gave such a definition to the linguistic-communicative aspect of the discourse that the discourse is a category of (natural) speech materialized in the form of an oral or written speech work, relatively complete from the semantic and structural point of view, and its length is potentially variable. Within the framework of the communicative approach, the term "discourse" is interpreted as "a certain sign structure that turns into a discourse with its subject, object, place, time, conditions of creation (production)". The article also states that the theory of discourse that emerged within text linguistics has never lost its initial connection with it, and has consistently progressed towards differentiating the subject of research and differentiating the concepts of "text" and "discourse" from a point of view. Discourse as a communicative event is a connection between oral communication and speech as an activity on the one hand and concrete text recorded during communication on the other hand.