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Is ergativity always a marker of agency? Toraja and Samoan grammar of action and the contribution of emancipatory pragmatics to social theory
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Aurora Donzelli
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
17. Mai 2010
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editorial
- Social class and sociolinguistics
- Reading Derrida: Language, identity and violence
- Engaging with human sociality: Thoughts on communication and embodiment
- Language trends: Reflexivity in commercial language policies and practices
- Contacts of Russian in the post-Soviet space
- Language use and language shift among the Malays in Singapore
- Family language policy: Core issues of an emerging field
- Is ergativity always a marker of agency? Toraja and Samoan grammar of action and the contribution of emancipatory pragmatics to social theory
- Opportunities for learning during storybook reading at preschool
- Negotiating language, literacy and identity: A sociocultural perspective on children’s learning strategies in a multilingual ESL classroom in Singapore
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editorial
- Social class and sociolinguistics
- Reading Derrida: Language, identity and violence
- Engaging with human sociality: Thoughts on communication and embodiment
- Language trends: Reflexivity in commercial language policies and practices
- Contacts of Russian in the post-Soviet space
- Language use and language shift among the Malays in Singapore
- Family language policy: Core issues of an emerging field
- Is ergativity always a marker of agency? Toraja and Samoan grammar of action and the contribution of emancipatory pragmatics to social theory
- Opportunities for learning during storybook reading at preschool
- Negotiating language, literacy and identity: A sociocultural perspective on children’s learning strategies in a multilingual ESL classroom in Singapore