Abstract
All patterns of the objective world are reflected in the categories of human knowledge. The categories of modern man's thinking are the product of a long historical development. Their content changes as a person's knowledge of objective reality deepens [Panfilov 1971: 3].
References
Bruce R. Gilson. Units and Measurement systems. Second edition. England. 2014
Bryansky L.N. Uncombed metrology. Moscow. 2002
Bryson Bill. A Short History of Nearly Everything. New York. 2008
Clarence L. Barnhart & Robert K. Barnhart. The World Book Dictionary, Volume one A – K, 1998 - 1066
Hebra Alex. Measure for Measure: The Story of Imperial, Metric, and Other Units. Baltimore. Johns Hopkins University Press. 2003
Lakoff G. A study in meaning criteria in the logic of fuzzy concepts. Papers from the 8 Regional Meeting Chicago Linguistic Society. Chicago, 1972 – 183.
Miller G.A. Practical and Lexical Knowledge. 1987 – 305-319.
Zupko. Revolution in Measurement: Western European Weights and Measures since the Age of Science. Philadelphia: The American Philosophical Society. 1990.
Бондарко A.B. Категории в системе функциональной грамматики. Коммуникативно-смысловые параметры грамматики и текста. Сборник статей. 2002 - 15-21
Кулагина О.С. Об аспекте меры в лингвистическом знании. Вопросы языкознания. 1991 - № 1 - 49-60