Submitted:
03 February 2026
Posted:
05 February 2026
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Abstract
This article identifies a terminological misrepresentation in the expression ‘small gatherings cancellation’—ranked by Haug et al. (2020) as the most effective non-pharmaceutical intervention during the COVID-19 pandemic. Corpus-based and theoretical analyses demonstrate that small gathering conventionally denotes a planned or spontaneous social event, whereas the predicate cancellation reinforces this event-based frame. Consequently, the phrase fails to capture the intended reference to restrictions on simultaneous presence in commercial or professional settings. Drawing on cognitive-linguistic theory and institutional usage from the WHO and CDC, this paper shows how such misrepresentation may trigger unintended conceptual frames, leading to interpretive ambiguity in both scholarly and policy contexts. Three alternatives are proposed to achieve better semantic alignment and enhance terminological precision and communicative clarity in future public-health discourse.
Keywords:
Corpus Evidence
Institutional Usage
Cognitive-Linguistic Analysis
Terminological Recommendations
Conclusion
References
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- CDC (2020b) ‘Holiday celebrations’. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Available online: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/holidays.html (accessed on 3 December 2020).
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- Haug, N., et al. (2020) ‘Ranking the effectiveness of worldwide COVID-19 government interventions’. Nature Human Behaviour, 4, 1303–1312.
- WebCorp (2020) WebCorp Live. Available online: https://www.webcorp.org.uk/live/ (accessed on 3 December 2020).
- WHO (2020) ‘Coronavirus disease (COVID-19): Small public gatherings’. World Health Organization. Available online: https://www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/coronavirus-disease-covid-19-small-public-gatherings (accessed on 3 December 2020).
| i | While isolated reinterpretations may emerge in highly specific post-pandemic policy contexts, these are exceptional and post hoc. The overwhelming corpus pattern supports the established social-event prototype. |
| ii | A striking cross-linguistic illustration is provided by Persian-language media coverage of Haug et al. (2020), where the highest-ranked intervention was repeatedly rendered as «دورهمیهای کوچک» (literally ‘small get-togethers’ or ‘small intimate gatherings’). This lexical choice closely reproduces the family-and-friends prototype activated by the English phrase ‘small gatherings cancellation’ in the absence of extended context, and illustrates how the English label—when encountered primarily via abstracts, tables, or headlines—readily invites a social-event construal even across languages (see, e.g. ISNA, 21 Nov 2020, www.isna.ir; Tebna, 1 Dec 2020, www.tebna.ir; and multiple other Persian-language outlets). |
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