| Contemporary issues in conversation analysis: Embodiment and materiality, multimodality and multisensoriality in social interaction |
22 |
| Risum teneatis, amici?*: The socio-pragmatics of RoastMe humour |
14 |
| Interdiscursive performance in digital professions: The case of YouTube tutorials |
7 |
| Proficiency and preference organization in second language refusals |
7 |
| Saying, presupposing and implicating: How pragmatics modulates commitment |
7 |
| Pragmatic development of Chinese during study abroad: A cross-sectional study of learner requests |
6 |
| Emoji and rapport management in Spanish WhatsApp chats |
6 |
| Pragmatics and the challenge of 'non-propositional' effects |
6 |
| Globalization, transnational identities, and conflict talk: The superdiversity and complexity of the Latino identity |
6 |
| You're a nuisance!: Patch-up jocular abuse in Chinese fiction |
5 |
| Interdiscursivity, social media and marketized university discourse: A genre analysis of universities' recruitment posts on WeChat |
5 |
| What's it called in Norwegian? Acquiring L2 vocabulary items in the workplace |
5 |
| Failed summons: Phonetic features of persistence and intensification in crisis negotiation |
4 |
| Illocutional concurrences: The case of evaluative speech acts and face-work in spoken Mandarin and American English |
4 |
| Prominence and coherence in a Bayesian theory of pronoun interpretation |
4 |
| Reflective practices in Open Dialogue meetings: Reporting and inferential 'My side tellings' |
4 |
| Discourse marker sequences: Insights into the serial order of communicative tasks in real-time turn production |
4 |
| Waiting for the customer: Multimodal analysis of waiting in service encounters |
4 |
| Reported thought as (hypothetical) assessment |
4 |
| The semiotic diversity of doing reference in a deaf signed language |
4 |
| The challenges of multimodality and multi-sensoriality: Methodological issues in analyzing tactile signed interaction |
4 |
| Impoliteness, aggression and the moral order |
4 |
| Aggressive humour as a means of voicing customer dissatisfaction and creating in-group identity |
4 |
| Referential cohesion in Swedish preschool children's narratives |
4 |
| Small talk in medical conversations: Data from China |
4 |
| Metaphor, hyperbole, and irony: Uses in isolation and in combination in written discourse |
4 |
| In defense of a grammar in the visual language of comics |
4 |
| From connective to final particle: Korean tunci or and cross-linguistic comparisons |
4 |
| You're not staying in Island sha o: O, sha and abi as pragmatic markers in Nigerian English |
4 |
| Relational work and identity negotiation in critical post observation teacher feedback |
4 |
| Im/politeness and in/civility: A neglected relationship? |
4 |
| The basic interactional competence of language learners |
4 |
| Oh wait: English pragmatic markers in Spanish football chatspeak |
3 |
| Gaze and overlap resolution in triadic interactions |
3 |
| Negotiating language ideologies through imaginary play: Children's code choice and rescaling practices in Dominica, West Indies |
3 |
| Defining in talk-in-interaction: Recipient-design through negative definitional components |
3 |
| What makes a straw man acceptable? Three experiments assessing linguistic factors |
3 |
| English and Russian vague category markers in business discourse: Linguistic identity aspects |
3 |
| Disagreeing without a 'no': How teachers indicate disagreement in a Hong Kong classroom |
3 |
| Critical intercultural impoliteness: Where are you located? Can you please transfer me to someone who is American? |
3 |
| Globalization, conflict discourse, and Jewish identity in an Israeli Russian-speaking online community |
3 |
| Dual feedback in interpreter-mediated interactions: On the role of gaze in the production of listener responses |
3 |
| 'It's not good saying Well it it might do that or it might nor''': Hypothetical reported speech in business meetings |
3 |
| Complexity theory and conversational humour: Tracing the birth and decline of a running joke in an online cancer support community |
3 |
| The use of politeness in WhatsApp discourse and move 'requests' |
3 |
| When gaze-selected next speakers do not take the turn |
3 |
| Multilingual workplaces - Interactional dynamics of the contemporary international workforce |
3 |
| Systematic literature reviews: Four applications for interdisciplinary research |
3 |
| Unpacking and describing interaction on Chinese WeChat: A methodological approach |
3 |
| On speaker commitment and speaker involvement. Evidence from evidentials in Spanish talk-in-interaction |
3 |