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Perspectives on Metonymy
Proceedings of the International Conference ‘Perspectives on Metonymy’, held in Łódź, Poland, May 6-7, 2005©2007 Conference proceedings -
Topic and Focus Markers in Spanish, Portuguese and French
©2020 Postdoctoral Thesis -
Translated Children’s Fiction in New Zealand
History, Conditions of Production, Case Studies©2014 Thesis -
Word Derivation in Early Middle English
©2008 Thesis -
Predications in competition and the rise of serial verb constructions in English
The verbal and nominal complementation of Old English aspectual and manipulative verbs©2024 Thesis -
A Reflection of Man and Culture in Language and Literature
©2019 Edited Collection -
Diachrony and Synchrony in English Corpus Linguistics
©2014 Edited Collection -
Reimagining Kenyan Cinema
©2022 Monographs -
Phonology, Fieldwork and Generalizations
©2018 Edited Collection -
Middle English Prepositions and Adverbs with the Prefix «be-» in Prose Texts
A Study in Their Semantics, Dialectology and Frequency©2017 Monographs -
Studies on evidentiality marking in West and South Slavic
©2015 Edited Collection -
Totalitarian Political Discourse?
Tolerance and Intolerance in Eastern and East Central European Countries – Diachronic and Synchronoc Aspects. In collaboration with Karsten Senkbeil©2013 Edited Collection -
French in and out of France
Language Policies, Intercultural Antagonisms and Dialogue©2003 Edited Collection -
Studies in Language, Culture and Society
ISSN: 2195-7479
Until the publication of volume 16, the series was coedited by prof. Piotr Ruszkiewicz. The series will publish books addressing the nexus between language, culture and society. Contrastive studies are welcome in particular, whether of a synchronic or diachronic orientation. Various perspectives on language/communication are of interest: grammatical, pragmatic, sociolinguistic, discoursal and semiotic. A wide range of theoretical and methodological positions is accepted: cognitive /anthropological / corpus linguistics, as well as pragmatics, interactional sociolinguistics, (specialized) genre analysis, or critical discourse studies. The cutting edge of the series is to publish innovative research elucidating the processes of inter- and intra-language variation and change, and at the same time relating them to flows in and across cognate categories of culture, community and society. The series will publish monographs and edited volumes reporting on data-driven research that carries a potential for application in translation studies, language teaching, multilingual (multicultural) education, and interdisciplinary critical discourse studies. The languages of publication will be English and German, yet book proposals in other major languages will also be considered, if centrally contributive to the main aim of the series.
20 publications