This article examines the concept of hospitality from an axiological and linguacultural perspective in Uzbek, Russian, and English language systems. Hospitality is analyzed as a universal cultural value reflected in linguistic expressions, proverbs, idioms, and communicative behavior. The study explores how different linguistic communities conceptualize hospitality through their historical traditions, social norms, and cultural identities. Comparative analysis demonstrates that while hospitality is universally appreciated, each language system encodes unique cultural meanings and value orientations. The research employs comparative linguistics, discourse analysis, and linguacultural interpretation to identify similarities and differences in the verbalization of hospitality across languages. The findings reveal that hospitality functions not only as a social practice but also as a significant marker of national mentality and cultural worldview.
Xosiyatxon Allayarbek kizi Allayarova (Wed,) studied this question.