“…Discourse studies are based on works that explore different types of discourse (media discourse, PR discourse, political discourse, advertising discourse, legal discourse, educational discourse, theatrical discourse, etc.) related to diplomatic discourse in linguocultures (Wood & Serres, 1970;Cohen, 1991;Hunt, 1992;Blum &Molotkova, 2004;Baker, 2015;Popova et al, 2018;Repina et al, 2018;Baranova et al 2020;Lynch, Salikhova, and Eremeeva, 2020;Boeva-Оmelechko et al, 2020;Ibragimov, 2021;Khodyreva et al, 2021;Khairutdinova et al, 2022;Masalimova et al, 2022;Muryasov, Zheltukhina & Zelenskaya, 2022;Sekyere-Asiedu et al, 2022;Tameryan et al, 2019;Tameryan, Zyubina & Zheltukhina, 2022;Zheltukhina, Zelenskaya & Ponomarenko, 2020;Zheltukhina et al, 2016;2017a;2017b;2021). Public-diplomatic discourse is a social and communicative act, public consciousness and status-role norms that perform the functions of positioning, transmission, and consolidation.…”