This study analyses the pragmatic aspects of intracultural management of TV interview in Japanese. In particular, it investigates how speakers, in order to achieve their communication goals, often melt together their sociopragmatic values with an unconventional use of language. From a didactic point of view, this observation proves to be particularly significant since it helps to reduce the boundary between a pedagogical approach too often linked to models of syntactic-grammatical correctness and a more recent one which tries to come as close as possible to actual interactional models by promoting awareness of intralingual communication strategies, and reducing sociopragmatic, pragmalinguistic and intercultural mistakes by foreign/second la...
This paper re-examines theories of linguistic politeness in Japanese, and holds that linguistic poli...
This book presents a thorough quantitative and qualitative corpus-assisted study of a particular com...
The focus of this article is on equivocation in Japanese televised interviews, broadcast over a 14-m...
This study analyses the pragmatic aspects of intracultural management of TV interview in Japanese. I...
This study analyses the pragmatic aspects of intracultural management of TV interview in Japanese. I...
Dialogue is a communicative genre that is conditioned by culture. As already described in conversati...
Dialogue is a communicative genre that is conditioned by culture. As already described in conversati...
The present book Live Television Interview. Characteristics of the Genre fits into current research ...
Background: Effective educational evaluations involve interviews, observations and nonverbal cue int...
Learning to communicate in a foreign language involves learning three of its aspects: communicative,...
© 1994 Catherine Ruth PritchardRecent applied linguistic research has focussed on "communicative com...
The study examines the concept of cultural determinism in relation to the business interview, analys...
ABSTRACT The article is devoted to the linguistic and sociocultural features of the talks how trans...
In the Central Caroline Islands of Micronesia today there is a string of closely related dialects, a...
© 2013 Dr. Kazumi NamikiThis study examines instructional effects on learners’ pragmatic development...
This paper re-examines theories of linguistic politeness in Japanese, and holds that linguistic poli...
This book presents a thorough quantitative and qualitative corpus-assisted study of a particular com...
The focus of this article is on equivocation in Japanese televised interviews, broadcast over a 14-m...
This study analyses the pragmatic aspects of intracultural management of TV interview in Japanese. I...
This study analyses the pragmatic aspects of intracultural management of TV interview in Japanese. I...
Dialogue is a communicative genre that is conditioned by culture. As already described in conversati...
Dialogue is a communicative genre that is conditioned by culture. As already described in conversati...
The present book Live Television Interview. Characteristics of the Genre fits into current research ...
Background: Effective educational evaluations involve interviews, observations and nonverbal cue int...
Learning to communicate in a foreign language involves learning three of its aspects: communicative,...
© 1994 Catherine Ruth PritchardRecent applied linguistic research has focussed on "communicative com...
The study examines the concept of cultural determinism in relation to the business interview, analys...
ABSTRACT The article is devoted to the linguistic and sociocultural features of the talks how trans...
In the Central Caroline Islands of Micronesia today there is a string of closely related dialects, a...
© 2013 Dr. Kazumi NamikiThis study examines instructional effects on learners’ pragmatic development...
This paper re-examines theories of linguistic politeness in Japanese, and holds that linguistic poli...
This book presents a thorough quantitative and qualitative corpus-assisted study of a particular com...
The focus of this article is on equivocation in Japanese televised interviews, broadcast over a 14-m...