Skip to main content
Pragmatics is the peer-reviewed quarterly journal of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA), which was established in 1986 to represent the field of linguistic pragmatics, broadly conceived as the interdisciplinary (cognitive, social, cultural) science of language use. Its goal is to reflect the diversity of topics, applications, methods and approaches available within this wide field, and thus to contribute to IPrA’s foundational aim of searching for coherence across different perspectives and of bridging any gaps between the field’s practitioners, whether their background is linguistic, anthropological, sociological, psychological, computational, etc.

Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Company on behalf of International Pragmatics Association (IPrA)

More about this publication?
Volume 26, Number 3, 1 September 2016
The referential ambiguity of personal pronouns and its pragmatic consequences

Open Access On the referential ambiguity of personal pronouns and its pragmatic consequences
pp. 351-360(10)
Authors: De Cock, Barbara; Kluge, Bettina

Favourites:
ADD

Open Access Register, genre and referential ambiguity of personal pronouns
pp. 361-378(18)
Author: De Cock, Barbara

Favourites:
ADD
Favourites:
ADD

Open Access What do(es) you mean? the pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish
pp. 417-446(30)
Authors: Jensen, Torben Juel; Gregersen, Frans

Favourites:
ADD
Favourites:
ADD

Open Access “Que bé, tu! (« that’s great, you! »)”
pp. 473-500(28)
Authors: Bladas, Òscar; Nogué, Neus

Favourites:
ADD

  • Access Key
  • Free content
  • Partial Free content
  • New content
  • Open access content
  • Partial Open access content
  • Subscribed content
  • Partial Subscribed content
  • Free trial content