- Loan words can cause intercultural miscommunication: The case of Hebrew shahid
Sandy Habib | PRAG 36:1 (2025) p. 89 | Article
- “What are you talking about? That is not true” — Men’s and women’s disagreements in English and Italian
interactions
Vittorio Napoli | PRAG 36:1 (2025) pp. 109–136 | Article
- Blended origo — Deixis in virtual reality
Karsten Senkbeil | PRAG 36:1 (2025) pp. 137–163 | Article
- Dual function of (inter)subjectivity in the use of well as a discourse marker
Ryo Takamura | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 254–275 | Article
- The role of translation in language standardization: The case of Egypt
Hisham M. Ali | PRAG 36:3 (2025) pp. 307–331 | 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
- Why not focus on combating the virus? On the active and passive egocentrism in communications
Baiyao Zuo | PRAG 35:3 (2024) pp. 448–473 | Article
- China’s real estate agents’ persuasion realizations on WeChat Moments
Jianyou He & Dengshan Xia | PRAG 35:4 (2024) pp. 529–554 | 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
- Delving into suggestion speech acts in Chinese authoritative academic discourse: A cognitive pragmatic perspective
Ke Li & Wenyu Liu | PRAG 34:2 (2023) pp. 161–189 | Article
- Requests for concrete actions in interaction: How support workers manage client participation in mental health rehabilitation
Camilla Lindholm, Jenny Paananen, Melisa Stevanovic, Elina Weiste & Taina Valkeapää | PRAG 34:2 (2023) pp. 190–214 | Article
- Perceiving the organisation through a coding scheme: The construction of managerial expertise in organisational training
Riikka Nissi & Esa Lehtinen | PRAG 34:3 (2023) pp. 422–446 | Article
- Notes on word order variation in Korean
Chongwon Park & Jaehoon Yeon | PRAG 34:4 (2023) pp. 588–614 | Article
- ‘I think’ in Swedish L1 and L2 group interactions
Eveliina Tolvanen | PRAG 34:4 (2023) pp. 615–641 | Article
- Nigerian stand-up comediennes performing femininity: A pragmatic analysis
Ibukun Filani | PRAG 33:2 (2022) pp. 209–236 | Article
- Overlaps in collaboration adjustments: A cross-genre study of female university students’ interactions in American English and Japanese
Lala U. Takeda | PRAG 33:2 (2022) pp. 285–312 | Article
- Ad hoc concepts and the relevance heuristics: A false paradox?
Benoît Leclercq | PRAG 33:3 (2022) pp. 324–342 | Article
- Metarepresentational phenomena in Japanese and English: Implications for comparative linguistics
Seiji Uchida | PRAG 33:3 (2023) pp. 436–459 | Article
- Metapragmatics in indirect reports: The degree of reflexivity
Mostafa Morady Moghaddam & Seyyed Ali Ostovar-Namaghi | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 381–402 | 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
- Re-evaluating the importance of discourse-embedding for specificational and predicative clauses
Wout Van Praet | PRAG 31:4 (2021) pp. 560–588 | Article
- Ritual frames: A contrastive pragmatic approach
Dániel Z. Kádár & Juliane House | PRAG 30:1 (2019) pp. 142–168 | Article
- Rejecting and challenging illocutionary acts
Mariya Chankova | PRAG 29:1 (2019) pp. 33–56 | Article
- Irregular perspective shifts and perspective
persistence, discourse-oriented and theoretical approaches
Caroline Gentens, María Sol Sansiñena, Stef Spronck & An Van linden | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 155–169 | introduction
- Changing perspectives: Something old, something new
Lieven Vandelanotte | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 170–197 | Article
- Recursive embedding of viewpoints, irregularity, and the role for a flexible framework
Max van Duijn & Arie Verhagen | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 198–225 | Article
- The emergence of viewpoints in multiple perspective constructions
Sonja Zeman | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 226–249 | Article
- In the beginning there was conversation: Fictive direct speech in the Hebrew Bible
Sergeiy Sandler & Esther Pascual | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 250–276 | Article
- The permeability of tag questions in a language contact situation: The case of Spanish-Portuguese bilinguals
Ana M. Carvalho & Joseph Kern | PRAG 29:4 (2019) pp. 463–492 | Article
- Analysis of politeness strategies in Japanese and Korean conversations between males: Focusing on speech levels and speech level shifts
Eun Mi Lee | PRAG 28:1 (2018) pp. 61–92 | Article
- A genre-pragmatic analysis of Arabic academic book reviews (ArBRs)
Mohammed Nahar Al-Ali | PRAG 28:2 (2018) pp. 159–183 | Article
- Forms of address in Basque
Xabier Alberdi-Larizgoitia | PRAG 28:3 (2018) pp. 303–332 | Article
- Vicissitudes of laughter: Managing interlocutor affiliation in talk about humanitarian aid
Kevin McKenzie | PRAG 27:2 (2017) pp. 257–300 | Article
- Skype appearances, multiple greetings and ‘coucou’: The sequential organization of video-mediated conversation openings
Christian Licoppe | PRAG 27:3 (2017) pp. 351–386 | Article
- Debate with zhuangzi: Expository questions as fictive interaction blends in an old Chinese text
Mingjian Xiang & Esther Pascual | PRAG 26:1 (2016) pp. 137–162 | Article
- Speech level shifts in Japanese: A different perspective. the application of symbolic interactionistrole theory
Yasuko Obana | PRAG 26:2 (2016) pp. 247–290 | Article
- On the meanings and functions of grammatical choice: The Spanish first-person plural in written-press discourse
Miguel A. Aijón Oliva | PRAG 23:4 (2013) pp. 573–603 | Article
- Subjective and intersubjective uses of Japanese verbs of cognition in conversation
Misumi Sadler | PRAG 20:1 (2010) pp. 109–128 | Article
- Interrogative allo-repetitions in Mexican Spanish: Discourse functions and (Im)politeness strategies
Domnita Dumitrescu | PRAG 18:4 (2008) pp. 659–680 | Article
- The pragma-ideological implications of using reported speech: The case of reporting on the Al-Aqsa intifada
Nawaf Obiedat | PRAG 16:2-3 (2006) pp. 275–304 | Article
- The shift from lexical to subjective readings of Spanish prometer ‘to promise’ and amenazar ‘to threaten’. a corpus-based account
Bert Cornillie | PRAG 14:1 (2004) pp. 1–30 | Article
- Coherence, focus and structure: The role of discourse particle ne
Song Mei Lee-Wong | PRAG 11:2 (2001) pp. 139–153 | Article
- Viewpoint shifting in Korean and Bulgarian: The use of kinship terms
Gwon-Jin Choi | PRAG 7:3 (1997) pp. 389–395 | Article
- Towards a pragmatic approach to the study of languages in contact: Evidence from language contact cases in Spain
Joan A. Argente & Lluís Payrató | PRAG 1:4 (1991) pp. 465–480 | Article
- The impoliteness metadiscourse about a public apology: Evidence from Twitter/X
Ana Larissa Adorno Marciotto Oliveira & Monique Vieira Miranda | Published online 3 June 2025 | Article
- Using interactional metadiscourse for rapport management: A study of Chinese university enrolment posts on WeChat
Jialu Wang & Geqi Wu | Published online 24 April 2025 | Article
- Establishing emergent common ground: Chinese doctors’ use of metapragmatic expressions in oncological consultations
Chengtuan Li, Jing Han & Zhiwei Zhao | Published online 18 August 2025 | Article
- Verbo-visual metafunctions and interactional metadiscourse strategic cues in Arabic advertisements: Verbo-visual strategies in Arabic ads
Mohammed Nahar Al-Ali | Article
- Infinitives, discourse viewpoint, and referential interpretation of the initiator in Spanish digital news
discourse
Miguel A. Aijón Oliva | Published online 31 July 2025 | Article
- A comparative study of U.S. and Chinese companies’ use of multimodal
interactional metadiscourse on Twitter
Wenjuan Xu & Xingsong Shi | Article