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81
To English with love
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2013
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82
Internationalization of higher education, 1933
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2013
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83
Discourses of trust
Candlin, Christopher; Crichton, Jonathan. - : Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan, 2013
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84
Strange academic women
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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85
Yiman does not have a word for ‘massacre’
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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86
Language shift and phone sex
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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87
Illegitimate English
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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88
Home is where I’m alienated*
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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89
Shopping while bilingual can make you sick
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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90
Globalisation and nationalism
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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91
Is bilingualism impolite?
Torsh, Hanna. - : Language on the move, 2012
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92
What would you do?
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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93
Postnatal depression and language proficiency
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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94
Bilingualism : bane or boon?
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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95
Human capital on the move
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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96
Rising multicultural middle class
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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97
Seeing Asians speaking English
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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98
The Sociolinguistics of nail care
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
Abstract: Have you recently had a manicure or a pedicure? I haven’t. In fact, I’ve never been to a nail salon in my life. Until about a decade ago that would not have been unusual among my friends and acquaintances. Today, however, this fact makes me an exception. Most of the women I know nowadays visit nail salons and here in Sydney little girls have ‘nail parties’ for their birthdays where they and their friends get their nails ‘done.’ If you haven’t bucked the trend and have been to a ‘nail bar’ recently, chances are you were served by a Vietnamese nail technician and/or the store was Vietnamese-owned. In the USA, for instance, less than 1% of the population are Vietnamese but 80% of nail technicians in California and 43% nationwide are Vietnamese. No surprise then that this 2008 Los Angeles Times article claims “it’s hard to meet a manicurist who isn’t Vietnamese.” Vietnamese nail technicians also dominate the market in the UK and most of continental Europe, in Australia, New Zealand and other parts of Asia including, unsurprisingly, Vietnam.
Keyword: 200401 applied linguistics and educational linguistics; 200405 language in culture and society (sociolinguistics)
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1076851
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99
Language test masquerading as literacy and numeracy test
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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100
Bilingualism is good for your mental health
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2012
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