The Russian language in its modern state is replete with a set of words and expressions, which are sometimes extremely difficult to understand. This does not mean at all that the native speaker does not know the meaning of the word, but often lexemes define several complex concepts, which, if they do not contradict each other, are used in completely different areas of knowledge. For example, the word "incorporation"
Incorporation is a polysemantic word that is actively used in linguistics, and in jurisprudence, and in political life, and in business, and in biology. The word itself comes from the late Latin word incorporation, which included the Latin words in - in and corpus - body, a single whole. Until the mid-twentieth century, the term "incorporation" was primarily used in linguistics and politics, as evidenced by the massive encyclopedias of the time. And only in the dictionary of Russian synonyms the word incorporation received a concise interpretation, namely, incorporation meant addition, addition, addition; systematization, inclusion, attachment. In linguistics, the term "incorporation" has mainly affected the structural type of languages. Namely, the Chukchi, Koryak, Alyutor, Eskimo languages, as well as the languages of the North American Indians. That is, languages that are purely agglutinative. In this case, the word incorporation means the combination into one whole word-sentence of two or more word stems, independent in their lexical meaning. That is, additional stems are included in the word form. These words can be nouns, verbs and participles; much less often it can be adverbs and numbers. For example: in the Chukchi language, the people using the basis of pykir (to come) and the basis of yara (house) formed one syntactic-morphological whole Ty-yara-pker-y-rkyn - to come home. However, in Ushakov's explanatory dictionary we will find the interpretation of the word incorporation of a purely legal and scientific value. The term "incorporation" in the political sphere means that a previously independent state was annexed to another state as a new territory. And in the dictionary of foreign words that are part of the Russian language, Mr. Chudinov, the word incorporation is interpreted as a mixture of dry and liquid substances into one mass in a complex. In jurisprudence, incorporation means systematization and unification in a collection of legal acts of current law. Systematization is carried out, as a rule, in alphabetical or chronological order. But the systematization and consolidation of legal acts can be carried out by branches of law or some other order. In the United States, the term "incorporation" is mainly used when it comes to granting a company the status of a legal entity.