Publications
Karatepe, Çigdem. 2021. Hedged Turkish complaints and requests in the Problem-Solution text pattern. Pragmatics and Society 12 (3) : 488–504.
Bardovi-Harlig, Kathleen. 2019. Invitations as request-for-service mitigators in academic discourse. Journal of Pragmatics 139 : 64–78.
Hayashi, Reiko. 2019. Categorization for occasioned semantics: Reanalysis of a Japanese Yamagata 119 emergency call. Discourse Studies 21 (5) : 495–521.
Norrby, Catrin, Camilla Wide, Jenny Nilsson and Jan Lindström. 2019. Task-Completing Assessments in Service Encounters. Research on Language & Social Interaction 52 (2) : 85–103.
Lindström, Jan, Jenny Nilsson, Catrin Norrby and Camilla Wide. 2019. Task-Completing Assessments in Service Encounters. Research on Language and Social Interaction 52 (2) : 85–103.
Ren, Wei. 2019. Pragmatic development of Chinese during study abroad: A cross-sectional study of learner requests. Journal of Pragmatics 146 : 137–149.
Rozumko, Agata. 2019. Evidential strategies in receiver-directed talk: The case of English inferential adverbs. Lingua 220 : 1–16.
Ruytenbeek, Nicolas. 2019. Indirect requests, relevance, and politeness. Journal of Pragmatics 142 : 78–89.
Tennent, Emma. 2019. ‘Do you think it’s a crime?’ Building joint understanding of victimisation in calls for help. Discourse & Society 30 (6) : 636–652.
Tipton, Rebecca. 2019. Exploring the ESOL-PSIT relation: Interpellation, resistance and resilience. Language & Communication 67 : 16–28.
Svennevig, Jan and Paweł Urbanik. 2019. Managing contingencies in requests: The role of negation in Norwegian interrogative directives. Journal of Pragmatics 139 : 109–125.
Webman Shafran, Ronit. 2019. Level of directness and the use of please in requests in English by native speakers of Arabic and Hebrew. Journal of Pragmatics 148 : 1–11.
Abdel Salam El-Dakhs, Dina. 2018. Saying “Yes” and “No” to requests. Is it the same in Egyptian and Saudi Arabic? Language and Dialogue 8 (2) : 235–260.
Gagne, Christophe. 2018. Indirectness and entitlement in product requests in British service encounters. Journal of Pragmatics 133 : 1–14.