25 results for "hesitation"
- Claims of not-knowing as patients’ responses in psychodynamic psychotherapyCarolina Fenner | PRAG 36:1 (2024) pp. 37–62 | Article
- “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
- Emotional language within influencer marketing on YouTube: A qualitative case study of twelve videos from Spanish YouTubersSanna Pelttari | PRAG 36:3 (2025) pp. 424–450 | Article
- 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
- Requests for concrete actions in interaction: How support workers manage client participation in mental health rehabilitationCamilla Lindholm, Jenny Paananen, Melisa Stevanovic, Elina Weiste & Taina Valkeapää | PRAG 34:2 (2023) pp. 190–214 | Article
- Interactional and categorial analyses of identity construction in the talk of female-to-male (FtM) transgender individuals in JapanChie Fukuda | PRAG 34:3 (2023) pp. 319–346 | Article
- Polar answers: Accepting proposals in Greek telephone callsTheodossia-Soula Pavlidou & Angeliki Alvanoudi | PRAG 34:3 (2023) pp. 447–472 | Article
- Pragmatic markers in English and Italian film dialogue: Distribution and translationLiviana Galiano | PRAG 34:4 (2023) pp. 501–533 | Article
- Development of the use of discourse markers across different fluency levels of CEFR: A learner corpus analysisLan-fen Huang, Yen-liang Lin & Tomáš Gráf | PRAG 33:1 (2022) pp. 49–77 | Article
- Power dynamics and pragma-cultural sources of unsourced evidentiality in PersianAmin Zaini & Hossein Shokouhi | PRAG 33:1 (2022) p. 99 | Article
- Paralanguage and ad hoc conceptsManuel Padilla Cruz | PRAG 33:3 (2022) pp. 343–367 | Article
- Navigating the complex social ecology of screen-based activity in video-mediated interactionUfuk Balaman & Simona Pekarek Doehler | PRAG 32:1 (2021) pp. 54–79 | 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
- Enacting ‘Being with You’: Vocative uses of du (“you”) in German everyday interactionPepe Droste & Susanne Günthner | PRAG 31:1 (2020) p. 87 | Article
- The emergent construction of feminist identity in interactionOlivia Hirschey Marrese | PRAG 31:3 (2021) pp. 406–429 | Article
- The question-response system in Mandarin conversationWei Wang | PRAG 31:4 (2021) pp. 589–616 | Article
- The development of interlanguage pragmatic markers in alignment with role relationshipsHao-Zhang Xiao, Chen-Yu Dai & Li-Zheng Dong | PRAG 31:4 (2021) pp. 617–646 | 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
- The use of discourse markers but and so by native English speakers and Chinese speakers of EnglishBinmei Liu | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 479–506 | Article
- “I want a real apology”: A discursive pragmatics perspective on apologiesCaroline L. Rieger | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 553–590 | 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 discourseYuxiang Duan & Liesbeth Degand | Published online 18 August 2025 | Article
- Mitigation and facework: The German modal particle mal in speculations and estimatesJessica Marsh | Article
- When personal names are mentioned in conversations: Presumed known, perhaps known and presumed unknownKevin A. Whitehead & Gene H. Lerner | Published online 27 January 2026 | Article