Publications
Apresjan, Valentina. 2019. Pragmatics in the interpretation of scope ambiguities. Intercultural Pragmatics 16 (4) : 421–462.
Desilla, Louisa. 2019. Happily lost in translation: Misunderstandings in film dialogue. Multilingua 38 (5) : 601–618.
Plappert, Garry. 2019. Not hedging but implying: Identifying epistemic implicature through a corpus-driven approach to scientific discourse. Journal of Pragmatics 139 : 163–174.
Zheng, Wuxi. 2019. Polyfunction derived from fillers: The case of làmò in Longxi Qiang. Journal of Pragmatics 139 : 79–96.
Chen, Jidong. 2018. “He killed a chicken, but it didn’t die”. An empirical study of the lexicalization of state change in Mandarin monomorphemic verbs. Chinese Language and Discourse 9 (2) : 136–161.
Fetzer, Anita. 2018. “Our Chief Political Editor reads between the lines of the Chancellor’s Budget speech”. The strategic exploitation of conversational implicature in mediated political discourse. Internet Pragmatics 1 (1) : 29–54.
Kapogianni, Eleni. 2018. Ironic implicature strength and the test of explicit cancellability. Intercultural Pragmatics 15 (1) : 1–28.
Köylü, Yılmaz. 2018. Comprehension of conversational implicatures in L2 English. Intercultural Pragmatics 15 (3) : 373–408.
Kryk-Kastovsky, Barbara. 2018. Implicatures in Early Modern English courtroom records . In Kryk-Kastovsky, Barbara and Dennis Kurzon, eds. Legal Pragmatics. (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 288). John Benjamins. pp. 65–80.
Douven, Igor and Karolina Krzyżanowska. 2018. Missing-link conditionals: pragmatically infelicitous or semantically defective? Intercultural Pragmatics 15 (2) : 191–212.
Moeschler, Jacques. 2018. Truth-conditional pragmatics. In Östman, Jan-Ola and Jef Verschueren, eds. Handbook of Pragmatics. 21st Annual Installment. (Handbook of Pragmatics 21). John Benjamins. pp. 49–79.
Dynel, Marta. 2017. But seriously: On conversational humour and (un)truthfulness. Lingua 197 : 83–102.
Hollebrandse, Bart, Napoleon Katsos and Alma Veenstra. 2017. Why some children accept under-informative utterances. Lack of competence or Pragmatic Tolerance? Pragmatics & Cognition 24 (2) : 297–313.