7 results for "First names"
- Dissenting emails in academia: The analysis of the micro- and macrostructure of Chinese university students’ emails to their lecturer in
SpanishDavid Rodríguez Velasco & María Cecilia Ainciburu | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 276–305 | Article
- The functional components of telephone conversation opening phase in Jordanian ArabicMohammed Nahar Al-Ali & Rana N. Abu-Abah | PRAG 31:1 (2020) p. 6 | Article
- Enacting ‘Being with You’: Vocative uses of du (“you”) in German everyday interactionPepe Droste & Susanne Günthner | PRAG 31:1 (2020) p. 87 | Article
- Variation in address practices across languages and nations: A comparative study of doctors’ use of address forms in medical consultations in Sweden and FinlandCamilla Wide, Hanna Lappalainen, Anu Rouhikoski, Catrin Norrby, Camilla Lindholm, Jan Lindström & Jenny Nilsson | PRAG 29:4 (2019) pp. 595–621 | Article
- To be or not to be your son’s father/mother: A cognitive-pragmatic perspective on terms of address in Najdi and Tunisian ArabicSami Ben Salamh, Zouheir Maalej & Mohammed Alghbban | PRAG 28:1 (2018) pp. 29–60 | Article
- Address practices in academic interactions in a pluricentric language: Australian English, American English, and British EnglishMaicol Formentelli & John Hajek | PRAG 26:4 (2016) pp. 631–652 | Article
- Address strategies in a British academic settingMaicol Formentelli | PRAG 19:2 (2009) pp. 179–196 | Article