Search
Search in
Search area
Subject
Category
Language
Publication Schedule
Open Access
Year
-
The Use of Modal Expression Preference as a Marker of Style and Attribution
The Case of William Tyndale and the 1533 English "Enchiridion Militis Christiani</I>©2010 Monographs -
The Adjective as an Adjunctive Predicative Expression
A Semantic Analysis of Nominalised Propositional Structures as Secondary Predicative Syntagmas©2013 Monographs -
The Literary Expressions of Chinese Experience
©2022 Monographs -
Illocutionary constructions in English: Cognitive motivation and linguistic realization
A study of the syntactic realizations of the directive, commissive and expressive speech acts in English©2013 Thesis -
Speaker Involvement in Political Interviews
©2015 Monographs -
Stance, Inter/Subjectivity and Identity in Discourse
©2023 Edited Collection -
Patterns of Linguistic Variation in American Legal English
A Corpus-Based Study©2011 Postdoctoral Thesis -
How adjectival can a participle be?
Subsective Gradience in English 2nd Participles©2022 Monographs -
Communicative Classroom Language for Bilingual Education
Teaching «Real English» for CLIL©2018 Textbook -
Illocutionary Shell Nouns in English
©2018 Monographs -
Evidentiality and Modality in European Languages
Discourse-pragmatic perspectives©2016 Edited Collection -
English Loan Translations in Polish
Word-formation Patterns, Lexicalization, Idiomaticity and Institutionalization©2015 Monographs -
The Adnominal Genitive in the Pauline Corpus
©2022 Monographs -
Echoes of English
Anglicisms in Minor Speech Communities – with Special Focus on Danish and Afrikaans©2020 Monographs -
Politics and populism across modes and media
©2019 Edited Collection -
Linguistic and Translatological Aspects of Poetry Translation
Joseph Brodsky’s Texts in Russian, English and Latvian©2020 Monographs -
Language and Belonging
Local Categories and Practices in a Guatemalan Highland Community©2019 Thesis -
Scenario Negotiation in Online Debates about the European Union
Analysing Metaphor in Communication©2019 Thesis