Lexical Activation, Enrichment, And Register-Sensitive Vocabulary Choice in Social Communication
Annotatsiya
This article examines lexical activation and lexical enrichment as productive processes that reflect language development and its adaptation to changing social and communicative demands. The study focuses on the relationship between vocabulary expansion, the reactivation of older lexical items, and the functional differentiation of speech styles across informal and formal settings. It is argued that an educated speaker usually commands at least two distinct lexical modes: one associated with everyday domestic communication and another with socially marked or institutionally formal interaction. Drawing on lexicology, sociolinguistics, and pragmatics, the article explores how lexical choice becomes a marker of register, communicative competence, and situational appropriateness. Using a qualitative interpretive method and theoretical synthesis, the study demonstrates that lexical stratification is not merely a stylistic phenomenon but a socially conditioned and pragmatically motivated aspect of language use. The findings show that lexical dynamism enhances communicative precision, reinforces social adaptability, and increases the efficiency of interaction in both private and public discourse.