- The sociopragmatic dimension of language use and evaluations of interactional behaviour: A cross-cultural investigation of Italian and British-English speakers’ perceptions
Valentina Bartali | PRAG 36:1 (2024) pp. 1–36 | Article
- Quotation headlines in the printed British quality press: (Re-)contextualisation meets entextualisation
Anita Fetzer | PRAG 36:1 (2024) pp. 63–88 | Article
- “What are you talking about? That is not true” — Men’s and women’s disagreements in English and Italian
interactions
Vittorio Napoli | PRAG 36:1 (2025) pp. 109–136 | Article
- Semantic and pragmatic properties of post-truth discourse: A description of reverse news on social media
Zhonggang Sang & Tongtong Shi | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 225–253 | Article
- Dual function of (inter)subjectivity in the use of well as a discourse marker
Ryo Takamura | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 254–275 | Article
- The role of translation in language standardization: The case of Egypt
Hisham M. Ali | PRAG 36:3 (2025) pp. 307–331 | Article
- The use of interlocking multi-unit turns in topic shifts
Innhwa Park, Rachel S. Y. Chen, Jan Gorisch, Song Hee Park, Nadja Tadic & Eiko Yasui | PRAG 35:1 (2023) pp. 51–71 | Article
- The use and perception of question tags in Trinidadian English
Michael Westphal | PRAG 35:1 (2023) pp. 101–128 | Article
- A relevance-theoretic analysis of Colloquial Singapore English hor
Junwen Lee | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 369–394 | Article
- ‘Where have you been hiding this voice?’: Judges’ compliments on the TV talent show Arab Idol
Fathi Migdadi, Muhammad A. Badarneh & Areej Qudaisat | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 395–422 | Article
- Towards a distinction between non-euphemistic and euphemism-based politically correct expressions: A relevance-theoretic perspective
Tatiana Golubeva | PRAG 35:4 (2024) pp. 504–528 | Article
- China’s real estate agents’ persuasion realizations on WeChat Moments
Jianyou He & Dengshan Xia | PRAG 35:4 (2024) pp. 529–554 | Article
- Didn’t she say to you, “Oh my God! In Pafos?”: Hypothetical quotations in everyday conversation
Constantina Fotiou | PRAG 34:1 (2023) p. 81 | Article
- Translating politeness on public notices with a directive function in Thessaloniki: A cross-cultural perspective
Christopher Lees | PRAG 34:4 (2023) pp. 534–564 | Article
- The use of boosters and evidentials in British campaign debates on the Brexit referendum
María Luisa Carrió-Pastor & Ana Albalat-Mascarell | PRAG 33:1 (2022) pp. 1–22 | Article
- Development of the use of discourse markers across different fluency levels of CEFR: A learner corpus analysis
Lan-fen Huang, Yen-liang Lin & Tomáš Gráf | PRAG 33:1 (2022) pp. 49–77 | Article
- ‘That is very important, isn’t it?’: Content-oriented questions in British and Montenegrin university lectures
Branka Živković | PRAG 33:1 (2022) pp. 124–153 | Article
- Hong Kong Cantonese TV talk shows: When code-switching manifests as impoliteness
Cher Leng Lee & Daoning Zhu | PRAG 33:2 (2022) pp. 237–259 | Article
- The pragmatics of alternative futures in political discourses: Legitimising the politics of preemption in Trump’s discourse on Iran
Ali Basarati, Hadaegh Rezaei & Mohammad Amouzadeh | PRAG 33:4 (2023) pp. 505–531 | Article
- Apology responses and gender differences in spoken British English: A corpus study
Yi An, Hang Su & Mingyou Xiang | PRAG 32:1 (2021) pp. 28–53 | Article
- ‘So many “virologists” in this thread!’: Impoliteness in Facebook discussions of the management of the pandemic of Covid-19 in Sweden – the tension between
conformity and distinction
Marta Andersson | PRAG 32:4 (2022) pp. 489–517 | Article
- Picking fights with politicians: Categories, partitioning and the achievement of antagonism
Jack B. Joyce & Linda Walz | PRAG 32:4 (2022) pp. 562–587 | Article
-
Dear, my dear, my lady, your ladyship
: Meaning and use of address term modulation by my
Anouk Buyle | PRAG 31:1 (2020) pp. 33–61 | Article
- Admonishing: A paradoxical pragmatic behaviour in ancient China
Dániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House, Fengguang Liu & Yulong Song | PRAG 31:2 (2021) pp. 173–197 | Article
- Metapragmatic comments on relating across cultures: Korean students’ uncertainties over relating to UK academics
Kyung Hye Kim & Helen Spencer-Oatey | PRAG 31:2 (2020) pp. 198–224 | Article
- Taboo vocatives in the language of London teenagers
Ignacio M. Palacios Martínez | PRAG 31:2 (2020) pp. 250–277 | Article
- “Abeg na! we write so our comments can be posted!”: Borrowed Nigerian Pidgin pragmatic markers in Nigerian English
Foluke Olayinka Unuabonah, Folajimi Oyebola & Ulrike Gut | PRAG 31:3 (2021) pp. 455–481 | Article
- Re-evaluating the importance of discourse-embedding for specificational and predicative clauses
Wout Van Praet | PRAG 31:4 (2021) pp. 560–588 | Article
- The development of interlanguage pragmatic markers in alignment with role relationships
Hao-Zhang Xiao, Chen-Yu Dai & Li-Zheng Dong | PRAG 31:4 (2021) pp. 617–646 | Article
- The pragmatics of ritual: An introduction
Dániel Z. Kádár & Juliane House | PRAG 30:1 (2020) pp. 1–14 | Article
- The socialisation of interactional rituals: A case study of ritual cursing as a form of teasing in Romani
Dániel Z. Kádár & Andrea Szalai | PRAG 30:1 (2019) pp. 15–39 | Article
- Calling Mr Speaker ‘Mr Speaker’: The strategic use of ritual references to the Speaker of the UK House of Commons
Peter Bull, Anita Fetzer & Dániel Z. Kádár | PRAG 30:1 (2019) pp. 64–87 | Article
- Ritual frames: A contrastive pragmatic approach
Dániel Z. Kádár & Juliane House | PRAG 30:1 (2019) pp. 142–168 | Article
- Introduction: Networked practices of emotion and stancetaking in reactions to mediatized events and crises
Korina Giaxoglou & Marjut Johansson | PRAG 30:2 (2020) pp. 169–178 | introduction
- Emotions through texts and images: A multimodal analysis of reactions to the Brexit vote on Flickr
Catherine Bouko | PRAG 30:2 (2020) pp. 222–246 | Article
- Parliamentary impoliteness and the interpreter’s gender
Magdalena Bartłomiejczyk | PRAG 30:4 (2019) pp. 459–484 | Article
- The pragmeme of disagreement and its allopracts in English and Serbian political interview discourse
Milica Radulović & Vladimir Ž. Jovanović | PRAG 30:4 (2020) pp. 586–613 | Article
- The group in the self: A corpus-assisted discourse studies approach to personal and group communication at the European Parliament
María Calzada Pérez | PRAG 29:3 (2019) pp. 357–383 | Article
- Modulating troubles affiliating in initial interactions: The role of remedial accounts
Natalie Flint, Michael Haugh & Andrew John Merrison | PRAG 29:3 (2019) pp. 384–409 | Article
- Appraising and reappraising of compliments and the provision of responses: Automatic and non-automatic reactions
Mostafa Morady Moghaddam | PRAG 29:3 (2019) pp. 410–435 | Article
- The permeability of tag questions in a language contact situation: The case of Spanish-Portuguese bilinguals
Ana M. Carvalho & Joseph Kern | PRAG 29:4 (2019) pp. 463–492 | Article
- A pragmatic analysis of the speech act of criticizing in university teacher-student talk: The case of English as a lingua franca
Dina Abdel Salam El-Dakhs, Fatima Ambreen, Maria Zaheer & Yulia Gusarova | PRAG 29:4 (2019) pp. 493–520 | Article
- Impolite viewer responses in Arabic political TV talk shows on YouTube
Bahaa-eddin A. Hassan | PRAG 29:4 (2019) pp. 521–544 | Article
- The concept of complimenting in light of the Moore language in Burkina Faso
Mahamadou Sawadogo | PRAG 28:1 (2018) pp. 139–156 | Article
- A genre-pragmatic analysis of Arabic academic book reviews (ArBRs)
Mohammed Nahar Al-Ali | PRAG 28:2 (2018) pp. 159–183 | Article
- Pragmatic development in the instructed context: A longitudinal investigation of L2 email requests
Thi Thuy Minh Nguyen | PRAG 28:2 (2018) pp. 217–252 | Article
- The motives attributed to trolls in metapragmatic comments on three Hungarian left-wing political blogs
Márton Petykó | PRAG 28:3 (2018) pp. 391–416 | Article
- The structural format and rhetorical variation of writing Chinese judicial opinions: A genre analytical approach
Zhengrui Han, Vijay K. Bhatia & Yunfeng Ge | PRAG 28:4 (2018) pp. 463–488 | Article
- “Mr Paul, please inform me accordingly”: Address forms, directness and degree of imposition in L2 emails
Maria Economidou-Kogetsidis | PRAG 28:4 (2018) pp. 489–516 | Article
- Where cultural references and lexical cohesion meet: Toward a multi-layer framing analysis
Ming-Yu Tseng | PRAG 28:4 (2018) pp. 573–598 | Article
- Manipulation as an ideological tool in the political genre of Parliamentary discourses
Ana Belén Cabrejas-Peñuelas | PRAG 27:2 (2017) pp. 207–234 | Article
- The use of discourse markers but and so by native English speakers and Chinese speakers of English
Binmei Liu | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 479–506 | Article
- The question of politeness in political interviews
Marcia Macaulay | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 529–552 | Article
- “I want a real apology”: A discursive pragmatics perspective on apologies
Caroline L. Rieger | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 553–590 | Article
- Discourse marking in spoken intercultural communication between British and Taiwanese adolescent learners
Yen-Liang Lin | PRAG 26:2 (2016) pp. 221–245 | Article
- Address practices in academic interactions in a pluricentric language: Australian English, American English, and British English
Maicol Formentelli & John Hajek | PRAG 26:4 (2016) pp. 631–652 | Article
- “Go up to miss thingy”. “He’s probably like a whatsit or something”. Placeholders in focus. The differences in use between teenagers and adults in spoken English
Ignacio M. Palacios Martínez & Paloma Núñez Pertejo | PRAG 25:3 (2015) pp. 425–451 | Article
- Detecting contrast patterns in newspaper articles by combining discourse analysis and text mining
Senja Pollak, Roel Coesemans, Walter Daelemans & Nada Lavrač | PRAG 21:4 (2011) pp. 647–683 | Article
- Attitudes of English speakers towards thanking in Spanish
Carlos de Pablos-Ortega | PRAG 20:2 (2010) pp. 149–170 | Article
- Address strategies in a British academic setting
Maicol Formentelli | PRAG 19:2 (2009) pp. 179–196 | Article
- Evaluation of politeness: Do the Japanese evaluate attentiveness more positively than the British?
Saeko Fukushima | PRAG 19:4 (2009) pp. 501–518 | Article
- The pragma-ideological implications of using reported speech: The case of reporting on the Al-Aqsa intifada
Nawaf Obiedat | PRAG 16:2-3 (2006) pp. 275–304 | Article
- The organisation of knowledge in British university tutorial discourse: Issues, pedagogic discourse strategies and disciplinary identity
Bethan Benwell | PRAG 9:4 (1999) pp. 535–565 | Article
- Has he apologized or not? A cross-cultural misunderstanding between the UK and Japan on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of VJ Day in Britain
Kumiko Murata | PRAG 8:4 (1998) pp. 501–513 | Article
- The impoliteness metadiscourse about a public apology: Evidence from Twitter/X
Ana Larissa Adorno Marciotto Oliveira & Monique Vieira Miranda | Published online 3 June 2025 | Article
- Listener and reader perceptions of um and uh
Tim Gadanidis | Published online 1 August 2025 | Article
- Pragmatic functions of lê ‘what’ in Longxi Qiang: Beyond questioning
Wuxi Zheng | Published online 8 August 2025 | Article
- Metaphor-based zeugmas in web-based promotional tourism discourse: A formal-functional study
Nazi Iritspukhova | Published online 18 August 2025 | Article
- How public discourse functions to restore moral orders: Online impolite comments on corporate apologies
Yongping Ran & Jiabei Hu | Published online 26 May 2025 | Article
- Development of pragmatic awareness during study abroad: A focus on pragmatic markers
Annarita Magliacane & Ariadna Sánchez-Hernández | Published online 18 August 2025 | Article
- Mitigation and facework: The German modal particle mal in speculations and estimates
Jessica Marsh | Article
- The conceptual semantics of English ‘speak’ (and why it matters)
Cliff Goddard | Published online 16 April 2026 | Article
- Insights into interaction management through backchannels: The case of French Belgian Sign Language and Catalan Sign Language
Alysson Lepeut & Sílvia Gabarró-López | Article
- Doing pragmatics with style: A corpus-pragmatic study of NOT-negation in the writings of Ta-Nehisi Coates [*] *
Yulia Hathaway | Published online 18 December 2025 | Article