25 results for "Military"
- Loan words can cause intercultural miscommunication: The case of Hebrew shahid
Sandy Habib | PRAG 36:1 (2025) p. 89 | Article
- Tracing relevance beyond codes and across modes: A multimodal pragmatic analysis of children’s rights advocacy campaign postersTurath Awad Al Tamimi & Thulfiqar H. Altahmazi | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 165–191 | Article
- The role of multimodality and intertextuality in accentuating humor in Algerian Hirak’s
postersMohammed Nahar Al-Ali & Badra Hadj Djelloul | PRAG 35:1 (2023) pp. 1–24 | Article
- Syntax and music for interaction: ‘Music-taking-predicate’ constructions in Hebrew musician-to-musician discourse [*] *
Yuval Geva | PRAG 35:1 (2023) pp. 25–50 | Article
- The use of the non-lexical sound öö in Hungarian same-turn self-repairZsuzsanna Németh | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 423–447 | Article
- Eye closures in spoken Hebrew: Conversational functions and meaning semiosisLeon Shor | PRAG 35:4 (2024) pp. 604–627 | Article
- Power dynamics and pragma-cultural sources of unsourced evidentiality in PersianAmin Zaini & Hossein Shokouhi | PRAG 33:1 (2022) p. 99 | Article
- Has madam read Wilson (2016)? A procedural account of the T/V forms in PolishAgnieszka Piskorska | PRAG 33:3 (2022) pp. 486–504 | Article
- The pragmatics of alternative futures in political discourses: Legitimising the politics of preemption in Trump’s discourse on IranAli Basarati, Hadaegh Rezaei & Mohammad Amouzadeh | PRAG 33:4 (2023) pp. 505–531 | Article
- Intergenerational interviews in Negev Arabic: Negotiating lexical, discursive and cultural gapsRoni Henkin | PRAG 33:4 (2023) pp. 532–558 | Article
- Out-grouping and ambient affiliation in Donald Trump’s tweets about Iran: Exploring the role of negative evaluation in enacting solidarityMohammad Makki & Michele Zappavigna | PRAG 32:1 (2021) pp. 104–130 | Article
- Tradition, modernity, and Chinese masculinity: The multimodal construction of ideal manhood in a reality dating showDezheng (William) Feng & Mandy Hoi Man Yu | PRAG 32:2 (2021) pp. 191–217 | Article
- Epistemic calibration: Achieving affiliation through access claims and generalizationsEmmi Koskinen & Melisa Stevanovic | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 354–380 | Article
- Metapragmatics in indirect reports: The degree of reflexivityMostafa Morady Moghaddam & Seyyed Ali Ostovar-Namaghi | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 381–402 | Article
- Spatializing kinship: The grammar of belonging in Amdo, TibetShannon M. Ward | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 452–487 | 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
- Admonishing: A paradoxical pragmatic behaviour in ancient ChinaDániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House, Fengguang Liu & Yulong Song | PRAG 31:2 (2021) pp. 173–197 | Article
- “Abeg na! we write so our comments can be posted!”: Borrowed Nigerian Pidgin pragmatic markers in Nigerian EnglishFoluke Olayinka Unuabonah, Folajimi Oyebola & Ulrike Gut | PRAG 31:3 (2021) pp. 455–481 | Article
- Any #JesuisIraq planned? [*] *
: Claiming affective displays for forgotten placesBarbara De Cock & Andrea Pizarro Pedraza | PRAG 30:2 (2020) pp. 201–221 | Article
- Rejecting and challenging illocutionary actsMariya Chankova | PRAG 29:1 (2019) pp. 33–56 | Article
- In the beginning there was conversation: Fictive direct speech in the Hebrew BibleSergeiy Sandler & Esther Pascual | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 250–276 | Article
- Vicissitudes of laughter: Managing interlocutor affiliation in talk about humanitarian aidKevin McKenzie | PRAG 27:2 (2017) pp. 257–300 | Article
- Impoliteness in institutional and non-institutional contextsSilvia Kaul de Marlangeon | PRAG 18:4 (2008) pp. 729–749 | Article
- Discourse in a religious mode: The Bush administration’s discourse in the war on terrorism and its challengesGordon C. Chang & Hugh B. Mehan | PRAG 16:1 (2006) pp. 1–23 | Article
- When personal names are mentioned in conversations: Presumed known, perhaps known and presumed unknownKevin A. Whitehead & Gene H. Lerner | Published online 27 January 2026 | Article