- Loan words can cause intercultural miscommunication: The case of Hebrew shahid
Sandy Habib | PRAG 36:1 (2025) p. 89 | Article
- Semantic and pragmatic properties of post-truth discourse: A description of reverse news on social media
Zhonggang Sang & Tongtong Shi | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 225–253 | Article
- Metaphors to describe sanctions against Iran in American and Iranian newspapers
Rasoul Mohammad Hosseinpur & Mahdi Mansouri | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 348–368 | Article
- Didn’t she say to you, “Oh my God! In Pafos?”: Hypothetical quotations in everyday conversation
Constantina Fotiou | PRAG 34:1 (2023) p. 81 | 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
- Has madam read Wilson (2016)? A procedural account of the T/V forms in Polish
Agnieszka Piskorska | PRAG 33:3 (2022) pp. 486–504 | Article
- The pragmatics of alternative futures in political discourses: Legitimising the politics of preemption in Trump’s discourse on Iran
Ali Basarati, Hadaegh Rezaei & Mohammad Amouzadeh | PRAG 33:4 (2023) pp. 505–531 | Article
- Out-grouping and ambient affiliation in Donald Trump’s tweets about Iran: Exploring the role of negative evaluation in enacting solidarity
Mohammad Makki & Michele Zappavigna | PRAG 32:1 (2021) pp. 104–130 | Article
- Invoking divine blessing: The pragmatics of the congratulation speech act in university graduation notebooks in Jordan
Muhammad A. Badarneh, Fathi Migdadi & Maram Al-Jahmani | PRAG 32:2 (2021) pp. 159–190 | Article
- Tradition, modernity, and Chinese masculinity: The multimodal construction of ideal manhood in a reality dating show
Dezheng (William) Feng & Mandy Hoi Man Yu | PRAG 32:2 (2021) pp. 191–217 | Article
- Picking fights with politicians: Categories, partitioning and the achievement of antagonism
Jack B. Joyce & Linda Walz | PRAG 32:4 (2022) pp. 562–587 | Article
- Taboo vocatives in the language of London teenagers
Ignacio M. Palacios Martínez | PRAG 31:2 (2020) pp. 250–277 | 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
- The “Long List” in oral interactions: Definition, examples, context, and some of its achievements
Gonen Dori-Hacohen | PRAG 30:3 (2020) pp. 303–325 | 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
- Rejecting and challenging illocutionary acts
Mariya Chankova | PRAG 29:1 (2019) pp. 33–56 | Article
- Impolite viewer responses in Arabic political TV talk shows on YouTube
Bahaa-eddin A. Hassan | PRAG 29:4 (2019) pp. 521–544 | Article
- The motives attributed to trolls in metapragmatic comments on three Hungarian left-wing political blogs
Márton Petykó | PRAG 28:3 (2018) pp. 391–416 | 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
- Mocking fakeness: Performance, phonetic aspiration and ethnic humour
Mia Halonen & Sari Pietikäinen | PRAG 27:4 (2017) pp. 507–528 | Article
- Legitimization and delegitimization strategies on terrorism: A corpus-based analysis of building metaphors
Maria Jose Hellin Garcia | PRAG 23:2 (2013) pp. 301–330 | Article
- A child of necessity: An analysis of political discourse in Nigeria
Adeyemi Daramola | PRAG 18:3 (2008) pp. 355–380 | Article
- Not so impersonal: Intentionality in the use of pronoun uno in contemporary Spanish political discourse
Jaime J. Gelabert-Desnoyer | PRAG 18:3 (2008) pp. 407–424 | Article
- Discourse in a religious mode: The Bush administration’s discourse in the war on terrorism and its challenges
Gordon C. Chang & Hugh B. Mehan | PRAG 16:1 (2006) pp. 1–23 | Article
- A touch of class: The erasion of group-based social inequality as a hegemonic process in political discourse
Jef Verschueren | PRAG 13:1 (2003) pp. 135–143 | Article
- Political cross-discourse: Conversationalization, imaginary networks, and social fields in Galiza
Celso Alvarez-Cáccamo & Gabriela Prego-Vázquez | PRAG 13:1 (2003) pp. 145–162 | Article
- Turn-initial ki ‘because’-clauses as a rhetorical responsive practice in Hebrew Facebook
comments
Leon Shor, Pnina Shukrun-Nagar & Zohar Livnat | Published online 31 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
- Doing pragmatics with style: A corpus-pragmatic study of NOT-negation in the writings of Ta-Nehisi Coates [*] *
Yulia Hathaway | Published online 18 December 2025 | Article