20 results for "face-to-face interaction"
- Embodied interaction with face masks and social distancing: Brazilian health care workers’ daily routines in pandemic timesUlrike Schröder & Sineide Gonçalves | PRAG 35:2 (2024) pp. 232–263 | Article
- The son (érzi) is not really a son: Generalization of address terms in Chinese online discourseKun Yang & Jing Chen | PRAG 33:1 (2022) pp. 78–98 | Article
- How broadcasters enhance rapport with viewers in live streaming commerce: A genre-based discourse analysisXingsong Shi & Huanqin Dou | PRAG 33:4 (2022) pp. 592–617 | Article
- Invoking divine blessing: The pragmatics of the congratulation speech act in university graduation notebooks in JordanMuhammad A. Badarneh, Fathi Migdadi & Maram Al-Jahmani | PRAG 32:2 (2021) pp. 159–190 | 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
- Calling Mr Speaker ‘Mr Speaker’: The strategic use of ritual references to the Speaker of the UK House of CommonsPeter Bull, Anita Fetzer & Dániel Z. Kádár | PRAG 30:1 (2019) pp. 64–87 | Article
- Urban interaction ritual: Strangership, civil inattention and everyday incivilities in public spaceMervyn Horgan | PRAG 30:1 (2019) pp. 116–141 | 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
- An initial description of syntactic extensions in spoken CzechFlorence Oloff & Martin Havlík | PRAG 28:3 (2018) pp. 361–390 | Article
- Face as an interactional construct in the context of connectedness and separateness: An empirical approach to culture-specific interpretations of faceUlrike Schröder | PRAG 28:4 (2018) pp. 547–572 | Article
- Vicissitudes of laughter: Managing interlocutor affiliation in talk about humanitarian aidKevin McKenzie | PRAG 27:2 (2017) pp. 257–300 | Article
- Talking about things: Image-based topical talk and intimacy in video-mediated family communicationMoustafa Zouinar & Julia Velkovska | PRAG 27:3 (2017) pp. 387–418 | Article
- The Skype paradox: Homelessness and selective intimacy in the use of communications technologyRichard H. Harper, Rod Watson & Jill Palzkill Woelfer | PRAG 27:3 (2017) pp. 447–474 | Article
- Reported threats: The routinization of violence in Central AmericaSusan Berk-Seligson & Mitchell A. Seligson | PRAG 26:4 (2016) pp. 583–607 | Article
- Singing and codeswitching in sequence closingsMaria Frick | PRAG 23:2 (2013) pp. 243–273 | Article
- Do insults always insult? Genuine impoliteness versus non-genuine impoliteness in colloquial SpanishMaría Bernal | PRAG 18:4 (2008) pp. 775–802 | Article
- The tabloid talkshow as a quasi-conversational type of face-to-face interactionCarmen Gregori-Signes | PRAG 10:2 (2000) pp. 195–213 | Article
- Effects of gender and generation on Chinese self-praise on social mediaYaping Guo, Wanrong Chen & Wei Ren | Published online 8 August 2025 | Article
- Insights into interaction management through backchannels: The case of French Belgian Sign Language and Catalan Sign LanguageAlysson Lepeut & Sílvia Gabarró-López | Article