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41
“Naughty boys” trying to learn
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2015
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42
Communicating in hospital emergency departments
Slade, Diana; Manidis, Marie; McGregor, Jeannette. - : Heidelberg : Springer, 2015
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43
English in the global village
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2014
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44
Crossing borders or carrying borders?
Li, Jia. - : Language on the move, 2014
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45
Gaining a green thumb for grassroots language activism
Grey, Alexandra. - : Language on the move, 2014
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46
How the presence of a bilingual school changes the linguistic profile of a community
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2014
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47
Sink-or-swim for international students
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2014
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48
Bilingual students at the crossroads
Gerber, Livia. - : Language on the move, 2014
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49
Superdiversity : another Eurocentric idea?
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2014
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50
Lost in bilingual parenting
Motaghi Tabari, Shiva. - : Language on the move, 2014
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51
Language work in the internet café
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2014
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52
Linguistic penalty in the job interview
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2014
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53
Emergency service provision in linguistically diverse societies
Piller, I. - : Language on the move, 2014
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54
English at the Olympics
Takahashi, Kimir. - : Language on the move, 2014
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55
Trust, talk and the dictaphone : tracing the discursive accomplishment of trust in a surgical consultation
O'Grady, Catherine; Dahm, Maria R; Roger, Peter. - : SAGE Publications, 2014
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56
Inventing languages
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2014
Abstract: An objection that is commonly raised against Esperanto and other auxiliary languages is that they are “invented.” Somehow, being “invented” is assumed to give Esperanto a shady character: it’s just not natural. The problem with this view is that – in being invented – Esperanto is not unique. And I don’t just mean that there is also Klingon and Volapük. In fact, each and every language with a name is an invention. We may not always be able to identify the inventors – in fact the trick of the inventors of English, Chinese, German, Spanish and all the others – has been not to let themselves be identified as language inventors. Instead, they pose as teachers, priests, bureaucrats, academics, poets or scientists. The invention of major national languages such as these gets obscured by time (although Standard German with its origins in the 19th century is not much older than Esperanto), and it is a rare opportunity to see a language invented before our own eyes.
Keyword: 200401 applied linguistics and educational linguistics; 200405 language in culture and society (sociolinguistics)
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1076194
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57
The brief in the art and design education: a multi-perspectival and mixed-methodological study
Hocking, Darryl. - : Sydney, Australia : Macquarie University, 2014
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58
English is excellence
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2013
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59
Saussure, the procrastinator
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2013
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60
Exclusion on campus
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2013
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