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“Hey BCC this is Australia and we speak and read English”: Monolingualism and othering in relation to linguistic diversity
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Conversational Humour and (Im)politeness: A pragmatic analysis of social interaction
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Juggling identities in interviews: the metapragmatics of ‘doing humour’
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“Hey […] this is Australia and we speak and read English”: an analysis of impoliteness in relation to linguistic diversity on a local government’s Facebook page
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8 |
The interplay between humour and identity construction: From humorous identities to identities constructed through humorous practices
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Accusations and interpersonal conflict in televised multi-party interactions amongst speakers of (Argentinian and Peninsular) Spanish
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Funniness and “the preferred reaction” to jocularity in Australian and British English: an analysis of interviewees' metapragmatic comments
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13 |
What makes teasing impolite in Australian and British English? “Step[ping] over those lines […] you shouldn’t be crossing”
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14 |
Approaching conversational humour culturally: a survey of the emerging area of investigation
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15 |
"It's just a bit of cultural [.] lost in translation": Australian and British intracultural and intercultural metapragmatic evaluations of jocularity
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16 |
“It’s never meant to be offensive…”: an analysis of jocularity and (im)politeness in Australian and British cultural contexts
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17 |
"There’s definitely gonna be some serious carnage in this house" or how to be genuinely impolite in Big Brother UK
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19 |
When a joke's a joke and when it's too much: Mateship as a key to interpreting jocular FTAs in Australian English
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In: Journal of Pragmatics 60 (2014), 121-139
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IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung
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"When a joke's a joke and when it's too much": mateship as a key to interpreting jocular FTAs in Australian English
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