8 results for "Pidgin"
- ‘It seems my enemy is about having malaria’: The sociocultural context of verbal irony in NigeriaFelix Nwabeze Ogoanah | PRAG 34:2 (2023) pp. 215–237 | Article
- Nigerian stand-up comediennes performing femininity: A pragmatic analysisIbukun Filani | PRAG 33:2 (2022) pp. 209–236 | Article
- Negotiating patients’ therapy proposals in paternalistic and humanistic clinicsAkin Odebunmi | PRAG 31:3 (2021) pp. 430–454 | 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
- Hawaiʻi Creole in the public domain: Humor, emphasis, and heteroglossic language practice in university commencement speechesScott Saft, Gabriel Tebow & Ronald Santos | PRAG 28:3 (2018) pp. 417–438 | Article
- The interactional context of humor in Nigerian stand-up comedyAkin Adetunji | PRAG 23:1 (2013) pp. 1–22 | Article
- “No flips in the pool”: Discursive practice in Hawai‘i CreoleToshiaki Furukawa | PRAG 17:3 (2007) pp. 371–385 | Article
- “We can laugh at ourselves”: Hawai’i ethnic humor, local identity and the myth of multiculturalismRoderick N. Labrador | PRAG 14:2-3 (2004) pp. 291–316 | Article