27 results for "reported speech"
- Semantic and pragmatic properties of post-truth discourse: A description of reverse news on social mediaZhonggang Sang & Tongtong Shi | PRAG 36:2 (2025) pp. 225–253 | Article
- Brazilian Portuguese wh-clefts in a multilevel analytic perspectiveAroldo Andrade & Juliano Desiderato Antonio | PRAG 35:4 (2024) pp. 475–503 | Article
- Didn’t she say to you, “Oh my God! In Pafos?”: Hypothetical quotations in everyday conversationConstantina Fotiou | PRAG 34:1 (2023) p. 81 | Article
- Polar answers: Accepting proposals in Greek telephone callsTheodossia-Soula Pavlidou & Angeliki Alvanoudi | PRAG 34:3 (2023) pp. 447–472 | Article
- Metarepresentational phenomena in Japanese and English: Implications for comparative linguisticsSeiji Uchida | PRAG 33:3 (2023) pp. 436–459 | Article
- If I testify about others, my testimony is valid: A study of other-justified discourses in Chinese online medical crowdfundingXin Zhao & Yansheng Mao | PRAG 33:4 (2023) pp. 641–662 | Article
- Polar answers and epistemic stance in Greek conversationAngeliki Alvanoudi | PRAG 32:1 (2021) pp. 1–27 | Article
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Well-prefaced constructed dialogue as a marker of stance in online abortion discourseKristen Fleckenstein | PRAG 32:1 (2021) p. 80 | Article
- On the dialogic frames of mirative enunciations: The Argentine Spanish discourse marker mirá and the expression of surpriseMaría Marta García Negroni & Manuel Libenson | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 329–353 | Article
- Epistemic calibration: Achieving affiliation through access claims and generalizationsEmmi Koskinen & Melisa Stevanovic | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 354–380 | Article
- Metapragmatics in indirect reports: The degree of reflexivityMostafa Morady Moghaddam & Seyyed Ali Ostovar-Namaghi | PRAG 32:3 (2021) pp. 381–402 | Article
- Alternative questions and their responses in English interactionVeronika Drake | PRAG 31:1 (2020) pp. 62–86 | Article
- Enacting ‘Being with You’: Vocative uses of du (“you”) in German everyday interactionPepe Droste & Susanne Günthner | PRAG 31:1 (2020) p. 87 | Article
- The pragmatics of text-emoji co-occurrences on Chinese social mediaXiran Yang & Meichun Liu | PRAG 31:1 (2020) pp. 144–172 | Article
- Taboo vocatives in the language of London teenagersIgnacio M. Palacios Martínez | PRAG 31:2 (2020) pp. 250–277 | Article
- Irregular perspective shifts and perspective
persistence, discourse-oriented and theoretical approachesCaroline Gentens, María Sol Sansiñena, Stef Spronck & An Van linden | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 155–169 | introduction
- In the beginning there was conversation: Fictive direct speech in the Hebrew BibleSergeiy Sandler & Esther Pascual | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 250–276 | Article
- Solega defenestration: Underspecified perspective shift in an unwritten Dravidian languageAung Si & Stef Spronck | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 277–301 | Article
- Indexical ‘mismatch’; or, adaptability at workJef Verschueren | PRAG 29:2 (2019) pp. 302–308 | epilogue
- Vicissitudes of laughter: Managing interlocutor affiliation in talk about humanitarian aidKevin McKenzie | PRAG 27:2 (2017) pp. 257–300 | Article
- Reported threats: The routinization of violence in Central AmericaSusan Berk-Seligson & Mitchell A. Seligson | PRAG 26:4 (2016) pp. 583–607 | Article
- Direct reported speech as a frame for implicit reflexivityMinerva Oropeza-Escobar | PRAG 23:3 (2013) pp. 481–498 | Article
- The pragma-ideological implications of using reported speech: The case of reporting on the Al-Aqsa intifadaNawaf Obiedat | PRAG 16:2-3 (2006) pp. 275–304 | Article
- Quote – unquote? the role of prosody in the contextualization of reported speech sequencesGabriele Klewitz & Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen | PRAG 9:4 (1999) pp. 459–485 | Article
- “Tía, me dolió, ¿sabes?”: Negotiating affiliation through the vocative tía in Spanish conversational storytellingVirginia Acuña Ferreira | Published online 19 May 2025 | Article
- Managing agency and urgency: Student injury incident reports in Chinese teacher-parent communicationChaoqiang Wang & Lixia Chen | Published online 23 March 2026 | Article
- When personal names are mentioned in conversations: Presumed known, perhaps known and presumed unknownKevin A. Whitehead & Gene H. Lerner | Published online 27 January 2026 | Article