26 results for "Pragmatic function"
- Dual function of (inter)subjectivity in the use of well as a discourse markerRyo Takamura | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 254–275 | Article
- The pragmatics of advice-giving in the media discourse: The interplay of speaker gender and hearer genderChihsia Tang | PRAG 35:1 (2023) p. 72 | Article
- The use and perception of question tags in Trinidadian EnglishMichael Westphal | PRAG 35:1 (2023) pp. 101–128 | Article
- Beyond the deferential view of the Chinese V pronoun nin
您
Dániel Z. Kádár, Juliane House & Hao Liu | PRAG 35:2 (2023) pp. 155–184 | Article
- A relevance-theoretic analysis of Colloquial Singapore English hor
Junwen Lee | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 369–394 | Article
- The cyclic nature of negation: From implicit to explicit. The case of Hebrew Bilti (‘not’)Ruti Bardenstein | PRAG 34:1 (2023) pp. 28–54 | Article
- Pragmatic markers in English and Italian film dialogue: Distribution and translationLiviana Galiano | PRAG 34:4 (2023) pp. 501–533 | Article
- Notes on word order variation in KoreanChongwon Park & Jaehoon Yeon | PRAG 34:4 (2023) pp. 588–614 | Article
- Perceptual resemblance and the communication of emotion in digital contexts: A case of emoji and reaction GIFsRyoko Sasamoto | PRAG 33:3 (2022) pp. 393–417 | Article
- Deceptive clickbaits in the relevance-theoretic lens: What makes them similar to punchlinesMaria Jodłowiec | PRAG 33:3 (2022) pp. 418–435 | Article
- Metapragmatics in indirect reports: The degree of reflexivityMostafa Morady Moghaddam & Seyyed Ali Ostovar-Namaghi | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 381–402 | Article
- The pragmatics of text-emoji co-occurrences on Chinese social mediaXiran Yang & Meichun Liu | PRAG 31:1 (2020) pp. 144–172 | Article
- Taboo vocatives in the language of London teenagersIgnacio M. Palacios Martínez | PRAG 31:2 (2020) pp. 250–277 | Article
- Prescriptively or descriptively speaking? How ‘information-quality’ influences mood variation in Spanish emotive-factive clausesTris Faulkner | PRAG 31:3 (2021) pp. 357–381 | 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
- Understandable public anger: Legitimation in banking after the 2008 crisisRuth Breeze | PRAG 31:4 (2021) pp. 483–508 | Article
- Salience and shift in salience as means of creating discourse coherence: The case of the Chipaya encliticsKatja Hannß | PRAG 31:4 (2021) pp. 533–559 | Article
- The historical present in Spanish and semantic/pragmatic structureCarlos Benavides | PRAG 29:1 (2019) p. 7 | Article
- “I’m really sorry about what I said”: A local grammar of apologyHang Su & Naixing Wei | PRAG 28:3 (2018) pp. 439–462 | Article
- Multimodal language use in Savosavo: Refusing, excluding and negating with speech and gestureJana Bressem, Nicole Stein & Claudia Wegener | PRAG 27:2 (2017) pp. 173–206 | Article
- Pragmatic use of ancient greek pronouns in two communicative frameworksChiara Meluzzi | PRAG 26:3 (2016) pp. 447–471 | Article
- The role of pragmatic function in the grammaticalization of English general extendersMaryann Overstreet | PRAG 24:1 (2015) pp. 105–129 | Article
- Pragmatic functions of lê ‘what’ in Longxi Qiang: Beyond questioningWuxi Zheng | Published online 8 August 2025 | Article
- Development of pragmatic awareness during study abroad: A focus on pragmatic markersAnnarita Magliacane & Ariadna Sánchez-Hernández | Published online 18 August 2025 | Article
- Mitigation and facework: The German modal particle mal in speculations and estimatesJessica Marsh | Article
- The agentive passive in Slovenian from a corpus pragmatics
perspectiveTamara Mikolič Južnič & Agnes Pisanski Peterlin | Article