Issue | Title | |
Volume 38 (2020) - Special Issue | “Do you understand?” Interactional strategies in ELF narratives of migration. A case study | Abstract pdf |
Paola Catenaccio | ||
Volume 18 (2016) - Special Issue | “Full of unearthly energy.” Verso una traduzione di W.B. Yeats | Abstract pdf |
Loredana Salis | ||
Volume 26 (2018) | “Good Morning, Vietnam!” The discursive construction of nationhood in the War Remnant Museum wall-texts | Abstract PDF |
Stefania Maci | ||
Volume 13 (2015) | “He tolle'd and legge'd”: Samuel Beckett and St. Augustine. Habit and Identity in Dream of Fair to Middling Women and Murphy | Abstract pdf |
Federico Bellini | ||
Volume 40 (2020) - Special Issue | “Health for kids”. Multimodal resources for popularising health knowledge on websites for children | Abstract pdf |
Giuliana Diani | ||
Volume 31 (2019) - Special Issue | “How am I to answer this in English?”. Pragmatic fluency in a nineteenth-century English-language teaching text | Abstract pdf |
Polina Shvanyukova | ||
Volume 30 (2019) | “Il diluvio della infedeltà orientale”. Islam in the view of the Old Albanian authors (16th - 18th centuries) | Abstract pdf |
Joachim Matzinger | ||
Volume 36 (2020) | “In fair Verona, where we lay our scene”. A multimodal analysis of the tourist gaze on Verona in travel blogs | Abstract pdf |
Valeria Franceschi | ||
Volume 31 (2019) - Special Issue | “Just a few lines to let you know”. Formulaic language and personalization strategies in Great War trench letters written by semi-literate Scottish soldiers | Abstract pdf |
Kirsten Jane Lawson | ||
Volume 23 (2017) | “Les noms de sémantique et de polysémie”. Mutamenti semantici e ristrutturazioni lessicali nel passaggio dal latino alle lingue romanze | Abstract pdf |
Angela Bianchi | ||
Volume 19 (2016) | “Like a Pupa starting to hatch”. The aesthetics of war and ethics of peace in Pat Barker’s Double Vision | Abstract pdf |
Lidia De Michelis | ||
Volume 40 (2020) - Special Issue | “Multiple G. S.Ws to the chest. B.P. 90 over 60. Pulse in the 120s. Push 1 of epi!” A preliminary study on the representation of spoken medical English in Grey’s Anatomy | Abstract pdf |
Gianmarco Vignozzi | ||
Volume 45 (2021) Special Issue | “My Kingdom for an Iphone”. Shakespeare and Mobile Phones | Abstract pdf |
Cristina Paravano | ||
Volume 34 (2020) - Special Issue | “Nanotechnologies: where should they take us?” The popularization of nanosciences on the web: a discourse analytical approach | Abstract PDF |
Cecilia Lazzeretti, Franca Poppi | ||
Volume 27 (2018) - Special Issue | “Never-ending stories”: da The Tempest di William Shakespeare alle riletture e riscritture del grande classico nella letteratura caraibica | Abstract pdf |
Maria Renata Dolce | ||
Volume 17 (2016) | “Nothing is but what is not.” Performing constatives in Shakespeare’s drama | Abstract pdf |
Bianca Del Villano | ||
Volume 44(2021) | “One is a woman, so that’s encouraging too”. The representation of social gender in “powered by Oxford” online lexicography | Abstract PDF |
Silvia Pettini | ||
Volume 31 (2019) - Special Issue | “Oops, I forgot, sorry”. The spill cries oops and whoops in the history of American English | Abstract pdf |
Andreas H. Jucker | ||
Volume 31 (2019) - Special Issue | “Please”, “Thank you”, “Excuse me” – “Why can’t you behave naturally?”. Linguistic politeness in post-revolutionary Soviet Russia | Abstract pdf |
Victoriya Trubnikova | ||
Volume 30 (2019) | “Será que você não entende que não há resposta?”: l’oscena vertigine letteraria di Hilda Hilst | Abstract pdf |
Luigia De Crescenzo | ||
Volume 45 (2021) Special Issue | “Such stuff as ‘texts’ are made on”. Digital Materialities and (Hyper)editing in The Internet Shakespeare Edition of ‘King Lear’ | Abstract pdf |
Alessandra Squeo | ||
Volume 27 (2018) - Special Issue | “The little O”. Signifying Nothing in Shakespeare | Abstract pdf |
David Ian Clive Lucking | ||
Volume 30 (2019) | “The office becomes a woman best”. Alchemy, Women, and Healing in The Winter’s Tale | Abstract pdf |
Martina Zamparo | ||
Volume 19 (2016) | “The whole is greater than the sum of the parts”. Metaphors of inclusion and exclusion in the British and Italian Fascist discourse of the 1930s | Abstract pdf |
Cinzia Giacinta Spinzi | ||
Volume 36 (2020) | “The whole of Bengal is in revolt”. A corpus based analysis of letters from the 1857-58 mutinies in India | Abstract pdf |
Christina Samson | ||
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e-ISSN: 2239-0359