- Loan words can cause intercultural miscommunication: The case of Hebrew shahid
Sandy Habib | PRAG 36:1 (2025) p. 89 | 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
- Dual function of (inter)subjectivity in the use of well as a discourse marker
Ryo Takamura | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 254–275 | Article
- “Why we are voting Biden-Harris”: A multimodal cohesion analysis of the Democratic party’s 2020 Presidential Campaign ads
Ana Belén Cabrejas-Peñuelas | PRAG 36:3 (2025) pp. 332–368 | Article
- Emotional language within influencer marketing on YouTube: A qualitative case study of twelve videos from Spanish YouTubers
Sanna Pelttari | PRAG 36:3 (2025) pp. 424–450 | Article
- What kind of laughter? The triple function of “Hhh” as a contempt, intention, and interpretation marker
Pnina Shukrun-Nagar & Galia Hirsch | PRAG 35:2 (2023) pp. 264–293 | Article
- Prosodic features of polite speech: Evidence from Korean interactional data
Lucien Brown, Grace Eunhae Oh & Kaori Idemaru | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 321–347 | Article
- Why not focus on combating the virus? On the active and passive egocentrism in communications
Baiyao Zuo | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 448–473 | 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
- “It’s nothing serious, take it easy”: Chinese doctors’ emotion-regulating discourses on the online medical consultation websites
Qingsheng Jiang, Yansheng Mao & Yihang Wang | PRAG 35:4 (2024) pp. 555–578 | Article
- Millennial identity work in BlablaCar online reviews
María de la O Hernández-López | PRAG 34:1 (2023) pp. 134–159 | Article
- ‘It seems my enemy is about having malaria’: The sociocultural context of verbal irony in Nigeria
Felix Nwabeze Ogoanah | PRAG 34:2 (2023) pp. 215–237 | 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
- Power dynamics and pragma-cultural sources of unsourced evidentiality in Persian
Amin Zaini & Hossein Shokouhi | PRAG 33:1 (2022) p. 99 | Article
- Overlaps in collaboration adjustments: A cross-genre study of female university students’ interactions in American English and Japanese
Lala U. Takeda | PRAG 33:2 (2022) pp. 285–312 | Article
- Concepts and context in relevance-theoretic pragmatics: New developments
Agnieszka Piskorska & Manuel Padilla Cruz | PRAG 33:3 (2023) pp. 313–323 | Article
- On the manifestness of assumptions: Gaining insights into commitment and emotions
Didier Maillat | PRAG 33:3 (2023) pp. 460–485 | Article
- Metapragmatics in indirect reports: The degree of reflexivity
Mostafa Morady Moghaddam & Seyyed Ali Ostovar-Namaghi | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 381–402 | Article
- Referring to arbitrary entities with placeholders
Tohru Seraku | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 426–451 | Article
- Aspects of væ (‘and’) as a discourse marker in Persian
Reza Kazemian & Mohammad Amouzadeh | PRAG 32:4 (2022) pp. 588–619 | Article
- Accounts as acts of identity: Justifying business closures on COVID-19 public signs in Athens and London
Spyridoula Bella & Eva Ogiermann | PRAG 32:4 (2022) pp. 620–647 | Article
- Prescriptively or descriptively speaking? How ‘information-quality’ influences mood variation in Spanish emotive-factive clauses
Tris Faulkner | PRAG 31:3 (2021) pp. 357–381 | Article
- Negotiating patients’ therapy proposals in paternalistic and humanistic clinics
Akin 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 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 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
- Affectivity in the #jesuisCharlie Twitter discussion
Marjut Johansson & Veronika Laippala | PRAG 30:2 (2020) pp. 179–200 | Article
- “I can’t believe #Ziggy #Stardust died”: Stance, fan identities and multimodality in reactions to the death of David Bowie on Instagram
David Matley | PRAG 30:2 (2019) pp. 247–276 | Article
- Parliamentary impoliteness and the interpreter’s gender
Magdalena Bartłomiejczyk | PRAG 30:4 (2019) pp. 459–484 | Article
- Pragmatic functions of I think in computer-mediated, cross-cultural communication between Taiwanese
and Japanese undergraduate students
Maria Angela Diaz, Ken Lau & Chia-Yen Lin | PRAG 30:4 (2019) pp. 509–531 | 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
- Making ‘yes’ stronger by saying ‘no’: Utterance-initial iya in statements of ‘yes’ in Japanese
Hironori Nishi | PRAG 29:1 (2019) pp. 133–154 | Article
- The dynamic layering of relational pairs in L2 classrooms: The inextricable relationship between sequential and categorial analysis
Ricardo Moutinho | PRAG 29:4 (2019) pp. 571–594 | Article
- A genre-pragmatic analysis of Arabic academic book reviews (ArBRs)
Mohammed Nahar Al-Ali | PRAG 28:2 (2018) pp. 159–183 | 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 ‘interrogative gaze’: Making video calling and messaging ‘accountable’
Richard Harper, Sean Rintel, Rod Watson & Kenton O’Hara | PRAG 27:3 (2017) pp. 319–350 | Article
- Mocking fakeness: Performance, phonetic aspiration and ethnic humour
Mia Halonen & Sari Pietikäinen | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 507–528 | Article
- The question of politeness in political interviews
Marcia Macaulay | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 529–552 | Article
- Japanese epistemic sentence-final particle kana
: Its function as a ‘mitigation marker’ in discourse data
Yuka Matsugu | PRAG 15:4 (2005) pp. 423–436 | Article
- Listener and reader perceptions of um and uh
Tim Gadanidis | Published online 1 August 2025 | Article
- A contrastive study of hedging in English and Chinese academic spoken discourse
Yuxiang Duan & Liesbeth Degand | Published online 18 August 2025 | Article
- Can denial strategies rebuild trust? Evidence from a hospital’s statement regarding cancer incidents in the laboratory
Kun Yang | Published online 23 March 2026 | Article
- Beyond interruptions: Co-constructed activities in MPs’ unofficial turns in Finnish, French, and German parliamentary debates
Johanna Isosävi, Heike Baldauf-Quilliatre, Christophe Gagne & Eero Voutilainen | Published online 26 May 2026 | Article
- The conceptual semantics of English ‘speak’ (and why it matters)
Cliff Goddard | Published online 16 April 2026 | Article
- Interrogation as domination: A forensic pragmatics inquiry of questioning strategies and Gricean violations in Philippine bilingual courtroom
interactions
Danica P. Francisco & John Arvin V. De Roxas | Published online 26 May 2026 | Article