Volume 26, Issue 3 (2016)The referential ambiguity of personal pronouns and its pragmatic consequences
Edited by Barbara De Cock & Bettina Kluge
Université catholique de Louvain | Hildesheim University
-
On the referential ambiguity of personal pronouns and its pragmatic consequencesBarbara De Cock and Bettina Kluge | pp. 351–360
-
Register, genre and referential ambiguity of personal pronouns: A cross-linguistic analysisBarbara De Cock | pp. 361–378
-
A pragmatic analysis of german impersonally used first person singular ‘ICH’Sarah Zobel | pp. 379–416
-
What do(es) you mean? the pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken DanishTorben Juel Jensen and Frans Gregersen | pp. 417–446
-
Pragmatic use of ancient greek pronouns in two communicative frameworksChiara Meluzzi | pp. 447–471
-
“Que bé, tu! (« that’s great, you! »)”: An emerging emphatic use of the second person singular pronoun tu (you) in spoken catalanÒscar Bladas and Neus Nogué | pp. 473–500
-
Generic uses of the second person singular – how speakers deal with referential ambiguity and misunderstandingsBettina Kluge | pp. 501–522
Articles