25 results for "hedging"
- “What are you talking about? That is not true” — Men’s and women’s disagreements in English and Italian
interactionsVittorio Napoli | PRAG 36:1 (2025) pp. 109–136 | Article
- Dissenting emails in academia: The analysis of the micro- and macrostructure of Chinese university students’ emails to their lecturer in
SpanishDavid Rodríguez Velasco & María Cecilia Ainciburu | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 276–305 | Article
- The role of translation in language standardization: The case of EgyptHisham M. Ali | PRAG 36:3 (2025) pp. 307–331 | Article
- “It’s nothing serious, take it easy”: Chinese doctors’ emotion-regulating discourses on the online medical consultation websitesQingsheng Jiang, Yansheng Mao & Yihang Wang | PRAG 35:4 (2024) pp. 555–578 | Article
- Eye closures in spoken Hebrew: Conversational functions and meaning semiosisLeon Shor | PRAG 35:4 (2024) pp. 604–627 | Article
- Pragmatic markers in English and Italian film dialogue: Distribution and translationLiviana Galiano | PRAG 34:4 (2023) pp. 501–533 | Article
- Intergenerational interviews in Negev Arabic: Negotiating lexical, discursive and cultural gapsRoni Henkin | PRAG 33:4 (2023) pp. 532–558 | Article
- A corpus-based study on contrast and concessivity of the connective ‑ciman in KoreanHye-Kyung Lee | PRAG 32:2 (2021) pp. 218–245 | Article
- Alternative questions and their responses in English interactionVeronika Drake | PRAG 31:1 (2020) pp. 62–86 | Article
- The Korean hortative construction revisited: Prototypical and extended functionsAhrim Kim & Iksoo Kwon | PRAG 30:3 (2020) pp. 351–380 | Article
- Pragmatic functions of I think in computer-mediated, cross-cultural communication between Taiwanese
and Japanese undergraduate studentsMaria Angela Diaz, Ken Lau & Chia-Yen Lin | PRAG 30:4 (2019) pp. 509–531 | Article
- Korean general extenders tunci ha and kena ha ‘or something’: Approximation, hedging, and pejorative stance in cross-linguistic comparisonMinju Kim | PRAG 30:4 (2019) pp. 557–585 | Article
- Toward a pragmatic account and taxonomy of valuative speech actsErnesto Wong García | PRAG 29:1 (2019) pp. 107–132 | Article
- Making ‘yes’ stronger by saying ‘no’: Utterance-initial iya in statements of ‘yes’ in JapaneseHironori Nishi | PRAG 29:1 (2019) pp. 133–154 | Article
- A genre-pragmatic analysis of Arabic academic book reviews (ArBRs)Mohammed Nahar Al-Ali | PRAG 28:2 (2018) pp. 159–183 | Article
- Refusals in Early Modern English drama texts: New insights, new classificationIsabella Reichl | PRAG 28:2 (2018) pp. 253–270 | Article
- The effects of English-medium instruction on the use of textual and interpersonal pragmatic markersJennifer Ament, Carmen Pérez Vidal & Júlia Barón Parés | PRAG 28:4 (2018) pp. 517–546 | Article
- “I want a real apology”: A discursive pragmatics perspective on apologiesCaroline L. Rieger | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 553–590 | Article
- Do hedges always hedge? On non-canonical multifunctionality of jakby in polishMagdalena Adamczyk | PRAG 25:3 (2015) pp. 321–344 | Article
- Constructing self–other distinction in dialogic contexts: Beyond identityEinat Kuzai | Published online 19 May 2025 | Article
- A contrastive study of hedging in English and Chinese academic spoken discourseYuxiang Duan & Liesbeth Degand | Published online 18 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
- A comparative study of U.S. and Chinese companies’ use of multimodal
interactional metadiscourse on TwitterWenjuan Xu & Xingsong Shi | Article
- Interrogation as domination: A forensic pragmatics inquiry of questioning strategies and Gricean violations in Philippine bilingual courtroom
interactionsDanica P. Francisco & John Arvin V. De Roxas | Published online 26 May 2026 | Article