Publications
Kollareth, Dolichan and Donghee Han. 2016. The Words for Disgust in English, Korean, and Malayalam Question Its Homogeneity. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 35 (5) : 569–588.
Asano-Cavanagh, Yuko. 2014. Japanese interpretations of “pain” and the use of psychomimes. International Journal of Language and Culture 1 (2) : 216–238.
Bułat Silva, Zuzanna. 2014. Some remarks on “pain” in Latin American Spanish. International Journal of Language and Culture 1 (2) : 239–252.
Levisen, Carsten. 2014. The story of “Danish Happiness”: Global discourse and local semantics. International Journal of Language and Culture 1 (2) : 174–193.
Priestley, Carol. 2014. The semantics and morphosyntax of tare “hurt/pain” in Koromu (PNG): Verbal and nominal constructions. International Journal of Language and Culture 1 (2) : 253–271.
Wierzbicka, Anna. 2014. “Pain” and “suffering” in cross-linguistic perspective. International Journal of Language and Culture 1 (2) : 149–173.
Ye, Zhengdao. 2014. The meaning of “happiness” (xìngfú) and “emotional pain” (tòngkŭ) in Chinese. International Journal of Language and Culture 1 (2) : 194–215.
Meuter, Renata F. I. and Leigh Buckley. 2008. The adolescent emotional maelstrom: Do adolescents process and control emotion-laden words differently to adults?. The Mental Lexicon 3 (1) : 9–28.
Chen, Hsin-Chin, Mike Friedman, Hyun Choi and Jyotsna Vaid. 2008. Perceiving and responding to embarrassing predicaments across languages: Cultural influences on the emotion lexicon. The Mental Lexicon 3 (1) : 122–148.
Marian, Viorica and Margarita Kaushanskaya. 2008. Words, feelings, and bilingualism: Cross-linguistic differences in emotionality of autobiographical memories. The Mental Lexicon 3 (1) : 72–91.
Pavlenko, Aneta. 2008. Structural and conceptual equivalence in the acquisition and use of emotion words in a second language. The Mental Lexicon 3 (1) : 92–121.
Segalowitz, Norman, Pavel Trofimovich, Elizabeth Gatbonton and Anna Sokolovskaya. 2008. Feeling affect in a second language: The role of word recognition automaticity. The Mental Lexicon 3 (1) : 47–71.