53 results for "particles"
- Claims of not-knowing as patients’ responses in psychodynamic psychotherapyCarolina Fenner | PRAG 36:1 (2024) pp. 37–62 | Article
- Dual function of (inter)subjectivity in the use of well as a discourse markerRyo Takamura | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 254–275 | Article
- Modifying requests in a foreign language: A longitudinal study of Australian learners of ChineseWei Li | PRAG 35:2 (2023) pp. 204–231 | 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
- Prosodic features of polite speech: Evidence from Korean interactional dataLucien Brown, Grace Eunhae Oh & Kaori Idemaru | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 321–347 | Article
- A relevance-theoretic analysis of Colloquial Singapore English hor
Junwen Lee | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 369–394 | Article
- Modal particles in ironic utterances: A common-ground approach to pretended surprise in verbal ironyHolden Härtl & Jana-Maria Thimm | PRAG 34:3 (2023) pp. 347–366 | Article
- Dealing with missing participants in the opening phases of a videoconferenceSabine Hoffmann & Giolo Fele | PRAG 34:3 (2023) pp. 393–421 | Article
- Perceiving the organisation through a coding scheme: The construction of managerial expertise in organisational trainingRiikka Nissi & Esa Lehtinen | PRAG 34:3 (2023) pp. 422–446 | 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
- Notes on word order variation in KoreanChongwon Park & Jaehoon Yeon | PRAG 34:4 (2023) pp. 588–614 | Article
- Japanese turn-final tteyuu as a formulation deviceYuki Arita | PRAG 33:2 (2022) pp. 157–183 | 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
- Metarepresentational phenomena in Japanese and English: Implications for comparative linguisticsSeiji Uchida | PRAG 33:3 (2023) pp. 436–459 | Article
- Has madam read Wilson (2016)? A procedural account of the T/V forms in PolishAgnieszka Piskorska | PRAG 33:3 (2022) pp. 486–504 | Article
- Korean imperatives at two different speech levels: Alternate ways of taking part in others’ actions and affairsMary Shin Kim | PRAG 33:4 (2023) pp. 559–591 | Article
- Polar answers and epistemic stance in Greek conversationAngeliki Alvanoudi | PRAG 32:1 (2021) pp. 1–27 | 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
- Spatializing kinship: The grammar of belonging in Amdo, TibetShannon M. Ward | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 452–487 | Article
- Aspects of væ (‘and’) as a discourse marker in PersianReza Kazemian & Mohammad Amouzadeh | PRAG 32:4 (2022) pp. 588–619 | 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
- A Tale of four measures of pragmatic knowledge in an EFL institutional contextRasoul Mohammad Hosseinpur, Reza Bagheri Nevisi & Abdolreza Lowni | PRAG 31:1 (2020) pp. 114–143 | Article
- Positively bitter and negatively sweet? Conventional implicatures and compatibility condition of emotive taste terms in Korean vs. EnglishSuwon Yoon | PRAG 31:2 (2020) pp. 303–329 | Article
- The question-response system in Mandarin conversationWei Wang | PRAG 31:4 (2021) pp. 589–616 | Article
- The pragmeme of disagreement and its allopracts in English and Serbian political interview discourseMilica Radulović & Vladimir Ž. Jovanović | PRAG 30:4 (2020) pp. 586–613 | Article
- Managing relationships through repetition: How repetition creates ever-shifting relationships in Japanese conversationSaeko Machi | PRAG 29:1 (2019) pp. 57–82 | Article
- Searches and clicks in Peninsular SpanishDerrin Pinto & Donny Vigil | PRAG 29:1 (2019) p. 83 | Article
- The emergence of viewpoints in multiple perspective constructionsSonja Zeman | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 226–249 | Article
- The permeability of tag questions in a language contact situation: The case of Spanish-Portuguese bilingualsAna M. Carvalho & Joseph Kern | PRAG 29:4 (2019) pp. 463–492 | Article
- Nationalism and gender in the representation of non-Japanese characters’ speech in contemporary Japanese novelsSatoko Suzuki | PRAG 28:2 (2018) pp. 271–302 | Article
- An initial description of syntactic extensions in spoken CzechFlorence Oloff & Martin Havlík | PRAG 28:3 (2018) pp. 361–390 | Article
- Vicissitudes of laughter: Managing interlocutor affiliation in talk about humanitarian aidKevin McKenzie | PRAG 27:2 (2017) pp. 257–300 | Article
- Requests and politeness in Vietnamese as a native languageThi Thuy Minh Nguyen & Gia Anh Le Ho | PRAG 23:4 (2013) pp. 685–714 | Article
- Compromising progressivity: ‘No’-prefacing in estonianLeelo Keevallik | PRAG 22:1 (2012) pp. 119–146 | Article
- The sentence-final particles ne and yo in soliloquial JapaneseYoko Hasegawa | PRAG 20:1 (2010) pp. 71–89 | Article
- Vernacular style writing: Strategic blurring of the boundary between spoken and written discourse in JapaneseSatoko Suzuki | PRAG 19:4 (2009) pp. 583–608 | Article
- Epistemic Deixis in KalapaloEllen B. Basso | PRAG 18:2 (2008) pp. 215–252 | Article
- Utterance-final conjunctive particles and implicature in Japanese conversationMichael Haugh | PRAG 18:3 (2008) pp. 425–451 | Article
- “Moral irony”: Modal particles, moral persons and indirect stance-taking in Sakapultek discourseRobin Shoaps | PRAG 17:2 (2007) pp. 297–335 | Article
- Japanese epistemic sentence-final particle kana
: Its function as a ‘mitigation marker’ in discourse dataYuka Matsugu | PRAG 15:4 (2005) pp. 423–436 | Article
- Face support – Chinese particles as mitigators: A study of ba a/ya and ne
Song Mei Lee-Wong | PRAG 8:3 (1998) pp. 387–404 | Article
- Affect in Japanese women’s letter writing: Use of sentence-final particles ne and yo and orthographic conventionsKuniyoshi Kataoka | PRAG 5:4 (1995) pp. 427–453 | Article
- The dialectics of interpersonal relating in a sports teamNicholas Hugman | Published online 28 April 2025 | Article
- The development of the Chinese multifunctional construction V+qilai
: From a complement-taking predicate to a discourse markerFangqiong Zhan | Published online 27 May 2025 | Article
- A contrastive study of hedging in English and Chinese academic spoken discourseYuxiang Duan & Liesbeth Degand | Published online 18 August 2025 | Article
- Metaphor-based zeugmas in web-based promotional tourism discourse: A formal-functional studyNazi Iritspukhova | Published online 18 August 2025 | Article
- ¿Cómo va a ser posible? The situated meanings of periphrastic and synthetic future-inflected wh-interrogatives in
SpanishMalte Rosemeyer & María Sol Sansiñena | Article
- “Tía, me dolió, ¿sabes?”: Negotiating affiliation through the vocative tía in Spanish conversational storytellingVirginia Acuña Ferreira | Published online 19 May 2025 | Article
- Mitigation and facework: The German modal particle mal in speculations and estimatesJessica Marsh | Article
- Production and understanding of change‑of‑state tokens in English talk‑in‑interaction among L1 and L2
speakersMin-Chang Sung & Sun-Young Oh | Published online 1 August 2025 | Article
- Tailoring language to social hierarchies: A pragmatic study on the salutation in Zeng Guofan’s Family LettersZepeng Wang, Haoming Li, Yansheng Mao & Li Zheng | Published online 19 December 2025 | Article
- 😮#油宝知道 (Baby of Oil knows)#: Translanguaging in playing cute on corporate social mediaDicong Gou, Shengyu Zhao & Ya Sun | Published online 2 June 2026 | Article