109 results on '"Unuabonah, Foluke"'
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2. “Sorry it took me a long time to reply”: Sorry as a discourse-pragmatic feature in African Englishes
3. Offers in Nigerian English
4. “You are quite funny paa!”: A corpus-based study of borrowed discourse-pragmatic features in Ghanaian English
5. Requesting Strategies in Nigerian and British English: A Corpus-Based Approach
6. Afrikaans discourse-pragmatic features in South African English
7. Intensifier Usage in Nigerian English: A Corpus-Based Approach
8. "Let's talk divorce": a multimodal critical discourse analysis of Oduduwa secessionist discourse.
9. Expressing gratitude in Nigerian English.
10. "Eish it's getting really interesting": borrowed interjections in South African English.
11. Frequency and Stylistic Variability of Discourse Markers in Nigerian English
12. Multimodality and appraisal choices in Nigerian coronavirus-related WhatsApp memes
13. Discourse-Pragmatic Variation and Change: Theory, Innovations, Contact, edited by Elizabeth Peterson, Turo Hiltunen and Joseph Kern
14. Generic structure and pragmatic acts in Yoruba traditional weddings in Southwestern Nigeria
15. Chapter 2.2. The use of stance markers in West African Englishes
16. Discourse-Pragmatic Borrowing in South African English.
17. Book review
18. Multilingual pragmatic markers in South African English
19. The pragmatics of ‘it is well’ in Nigerian English
20. “Noah’s Family Was on Lockdown”: Multimodal Metaphors in Religious Coronavirus-Related Internet Memes in the Nigerian WhatsApp Space
21. Coping with HIV/AIDS: A multimodal discourse analysis of selected HIV/AIDS posters in south-western Nigeria
22. Borrowed Swahili discourse-pragmatic features in Kenyan and Tanzanian Englishes
23. “He’s a lawyer you know and all of that”
24. “Are you saying …?”
25. Borrowed Discourse-Pragmatic Features in Kenyan English
26. Introducing the Historical Corpus of English in Nigeria (HiCE–Nig)
27. "He's a lawyer you know and all of that": General extenders in Nigerian English.
28. Stance and engagement in selected Nigerian Supreme Court judgments
29. “Oya let’s go to Nigeria”
30. ‘Mehn! This wins the award’
31. ‘Nigeria is fighting Covid-419’: A multimodal critical discourse analysis of political protest in Nigerian coronavirus-related internet memes
32. 'Mehn ! This wins the award': The discourse-pragmatic functions of mehn in Nigerian English.
33. Exploring multilingual resources of U.S.-Nigerians on a Nigerian web forum - Mirka Honkanen, World Englishes on the Web: The Nigerian Diaspora in the USA. Amsterdam/Philadephia: John Benjamins, 2020. Pp. vii + 338. Hardback €105.00, ISBN 9789027207395
34. “Abeg na! we write so our comments can be posted!”
35. Conflict-motivated acts in the open letters of two former Nigerian presidents
36. Argumentation in Nigerian investigative public hearings
37. Haba! Bilingual interjections in Nigerian English: A corpus-based study
38. Extended discourse‐pragmatic usage ofnowin Nigerian English
39. “So you know ehn … ” The use of bilingual interjections in Nigerian English
40. Bilingual pragmatic markers in Nigerian English
41. Extended discourse‐pragmatic usage of now in Nigerian English.
42. Bilingual pragmatic markers in Nigerian English.
43. “You're not staying in Island sha o”: O, sha and abi as pragmatic markers in Nigerian English
44. Forms of address and language ideologies: The case of a southwestern Nigerian university
45. Direct quotations in Nigerian investigative public hearings
46. Commentary pragmatic markers in Nigerian English
47. New Englishes, New Methods.
48. Butas a stance marker in Nigerian investigative public hearings
49. Contextual Beliefs in a Nigerian Quasi-Judicial Public Hearing
50. But as a stance marker in Nigerian investigative public hearings.
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