All Stories

  1. Impression management in the Early Modern English courtroom
  2. Applying (im)politeness and facework research to professional settings: An introduction
  3. Negotiating difference in political contexts: An exploration of Hansard
  4. 20. Corpus annotation
  5. Chapter 9. Achieving influence through negotiation
  6. John Webster, the dark and violent playwright?
  7. The History of English Spelling
  8. Context and historical (socio-)pragmatics twenty years on
  9. Mapping Hansard Impression Management Strategies through Time and Space
  10. Tracing facework over time using semi-automated methods
  11. Chapter 7: Pragmatics and discourse
  12. The Routledge Handbook of Pragmatics
  13. (Im)politeness in Legal Settings
  14. What's in a Word-list?
  15. Slurs, insults, (backhanded) compliments and other strategic facework moves
  16. Public appeals, news interviews and crocodile tears: an argument for multi-channel analysis
  17. Call centre interaction: A case of sanctioned face attack?
  18. Tracing Crime Narratives in the Palmer Trial (1856)
  19. Space for all? European perspectives on minority languages and identity
  20. Introduction: A linguistic/discursive space for all?
  21. Constructing a shared history, space and destiny
  22. Historical Pragmatics: Evidence From The Old Bailey
  23. Data retrieval in a diachronic context: The case of the historical English courtroom
  24. Cross-examining lawyers, facework and the adversarial courtroom
  25. Libelling Oscar Wilde: The case of Regina vs. John Sholto Douglas
  26. Facework and im/politeness across legal contexts: An introduction
  27. A corpus-based approach to mind style
  28. ‘See Better, Lear’? See Lear Better! A Corpus-Based Pragma-Stylistic Investigation of Shakespeare’s King Lear
  29. Identifying key sociophilological usage in plays and trial proceedings (1640–1760)
  30. The History of English Spelling
  31. The Identification of Spelling Variants in English and German Historical Texts: Manual or Automatic?
  32. Digital Humanities 2006: When Two Became Many
  33. (Re)initiating strategies
  34. Comparing and combining a semantic tagger and a statistical tool for MWE extraction
  35. “Can innocent people be guilty?”
  36. The historical courtroom