This volume explores how metadiscourse shapes communication across cultures and time. Drawing on contemporary and historical evidence, the chapters show how writers and speakers organise discourse, construct identities, and negotiate persuasion in diverse intercultural settings. With analyses ranging from academic and medical writing to business and digital interaction, the book illustrates the subtle ways language bridges cultural differences and supports understanding in a globalised world, offering fresh empirical insights into the pragmatics of communication.
págs. 1-21
Enhancing the effectiveness of academic writing in Spanish universities: A corpus study on the use of boosters in doctoral dissertations
págs. 25-49
The pragmatic implications of subordination in cultural and linguistic variation: American and British academic writing
págs. 51-67
Metadiscourse and persuasion in intercultural setting: Evidence from English-medium anglophone and Czech research articles
págs. 69-92
Context-sensitive strategies for effective intercultural communication in English Medium Instruction
págs. 93-111
Intercultural awareness in the medical consultation: Informed consent
págs. 113-129
Impoliteness language as a metadiscourse device in intercultural settings: Evidence from grag queen language
págs. 131-152
págs. 155-178
Metadiscourse markers in Late Modern English scientific discourse: Evidence from the Coruña Corpus
págs. 179-211
págs. 213-241
A systemic functional linguistics-based exploration of metadiscourse: Evidence from early modern English and Spanish grammar and dictionary paratexts
págs. 243-286
© 2001-2026 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados