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Programme
Organizers
Venue
News
Contact us
Programme
Day One - Thursday May 30, 2024
Conference Room
Room C1
Room D1
Room E1
Room F1
Room G1
Conference Room
Room C1
Room D1
Room E1
Room F1
Room G1
09:00-10:00
Registration opens
Conference Opening
10:00-10:30
Conference Room
Silvia Bruti, Gloria Cappelli, István Kecskés
István Kecskés
What does intercultural pragmatics have to do with chatbot pragmatics?
10:30-11:30
Conference Room
István Kecskés
11:30-12:00
Coffee Break
Ethnically charged impoliteness in Trump’s political rhetoric: How far was too far?
12:00-12:30
Conference Room
Samuel Bourgeois
Understanding the Development of the Intercultural Sensitivity of Personnel in the U.S. Armed Forces
12:30-13:00
Conference Room
Maria Sheila Balosbalos-Arado
Cross-Cultural Dialogue in the China-US Trade War: A Corpus-Assisted Rhetorical Analysis of the FOX vs. CGTN Host Debate
13:00-13:30
Conference Room
Anni Wang
13:30 - 15:00
Lunch break
Peter Siemund
Intercultural Pragmatics in Multilingual Ecologies
15:00 - 16:00
Conference Room
Peter Siemund
“Britain’s Obama moment”: Rishi Sunak’s rise to UK prime minister viewed across intralingual spaces
16:00-16:30
Conference Room
Denise Filmer
Relevance, Imagined audiences, and Broadcast Communication
16:30-17:00
Conference Room
Kate Scott
17:00-17:30
Coffee break
On Readers’ Ability to Identify and Explicitate Political Implicatures in On-line Media Discourse: The Kommersant Telegram Channel Case Study
17:30-18:00
Conference Room
Alexey Tymbay
The Perception of Kinship Terms in a Malaysian Politician’s Open Letter
18:00-18:30
Conference Room
Khadijah Omar
Self-praise strategies in French and US press releases: a cross-cultural perspective
18:30-19:00
Conference Room
Els Tobback
09:00-10:00
Registration opens
11:30-12:00
Coffee Break
Framing of vaccination in Hungarian (fake) news
12:00-12:30
Room C1
Éva Szabó
Implicit pragmatic phenomena in Hungarian health-related real and fake news headlines: a corpus-based comparative analysis
12:30-13:00
Room C1
Enikő Németh T., Katalin Nagy C., Zsuzsanna Németh
13:30 - 15:00
Lunch break
Circulation of hate speech through implicit meanings
16:00-16:30
Room C1
Mattia Retta
Implicit persuasion in news report: a corpus-based study of present-day Italian
16:30-17:00
Room C1
Federica Cominetti
17:00-17:30
Coffee break
Conspiracy theory discourse: a corpus-driven cross-linguistic analysis of Telegram data
17:30-18:00
Room C1
Costanza Marini
Is stance in fake news expressed differently across languages?
18:00-18:30
Room C1
Nele Põldvere, Elizaveta Kibisova, Radoslava Trnavac, Silje Susanne Alvestad
The analysis of utterances with imperative forms in Hungarian health-related fake news
18:30-19:00
Room C1
Anett Árvay, Katalin Nagy C., Enikő Németh T.
09:00-10:00
Registration opens
11:30-12:00
Coffee Break
Self-serving mitigation in responses to online negative feedback. A cross-linguistic analysis
12:00-12:30
Room D1
Griet Boone, Irene Cenni, Sofie Decock
A contrastive analysis of the discourse of English and Spanish influencers on X and Instagram
12:30-13:00
Room D1
María Luisa Carrió-Pastor
“I would never take my pet to someone I didn’t trust…”: A cross cultural analysis of evaluative language in English and Italian reviews of veterinary clinics
13:00-13:30
Room D1
Nicoletta Simi, Gianmarco Vignozzi
13:30 - 15:00
Lunch break
“Bro must got a lot of money”: A Pragmatic Study on Digitally-Based Impoliteness Strategies against Marrying a Person with Disabilities
16:00-16:30
Room D1
Annalisa Raffone
The Pragmatics of Online Healthcare Communication: Politeness Strategies in the HealthUnlocked “Anxiety and Depression Support” Community
16:30-17:00
Room D1
Annalisa Federici
17:00-17:30
Coffee break
“I’m sorry for you and you are not alone”. Politeness strategies on Reddit: the case of r/hikikomori
17:30-18:00
Room D1
Silvia Cavalieri
Navigating Bilingual Conversations in Dementia: Exploring the Intersection of Code- Choice, Co-construction, and Repetition Across Two Languages
18:00-18:30
Room D1
Carolin Schneider
Exploring Politeness in Saudi Hospital Settings: Insights from Nurses’ Intercultural Perceptions
18:30-19:00
Room D1
Badryah Alalawi
09:00-10:00
Registration opens
11:30-12:00
Coffee Break
The role of the English language variety in the awareness of pragmatic markers by L2 users: a study abroad perspective
12:00-12:30
Room E1
Annarita Magliacane
Improving Pragmatic Skills through Roleplays
12:30-13:00
Room E1
Consuelo Quijano, Joy Bolado
Requests and Responses to Requests in Jordanian Arabic
13:00-13:30
Room E1
Raghad Abu Salma, Beatrice Szczepek Reed, Martin Dewey
13:30 - 15:00
Lunch break
Linguistic Cues in Chinese English Learners’ Sarcasm Comprehension on Twitter
16:00-16:30
Room E1
Xuan Li
The Interpretation of Match-seeking Posts in Mandarin Conversational Classroom Interactions
16:30-17:00
Room E1
Haidan Wang
17:00-17:30
Coffee break
Investigating Second Language Teachers’ Pragmatic Awareness through Intercultural Virtual Exchange
17:30-18:00
Room E1
Asma Ben Hannachi, Ciara R. Wigham, Anne-Laure Foucher
Resonance in Second Language Testing: Intercultural imitation between examiner and learner
18:00-18:30
Room E1
Vittorio Tantucci, Raffaella Bottini
How to develop the intercultural competence during Second Language Acquisition in Italian L2 contest
18:30-19:00
Room E1
Caterina Calicchio
09:00-10:00
Registration opens
11:30-12:00
Coffee Break
‘Lost’ in Translation? Korean and English Intercultural Communication in Fictional Telecinematic Dialogue
12:00-12:30
Room F1
Monika Kirner-Ludwig and HyeYeon Kim
Different Conceptualizations of Front and Back: The Case of Thai and Korean
12:30-13:00
Room F1
Seongha Rhee, Kultida Khammee
What a change! On the exclamative and its translation
13:00-13:30
Room F1
Faye Troughton, Lobke Ghesquière
13:30 - 15:00
Lunch break
A cross-linguistic study of public informational messages in Lithuanian and Ukrainian
16:00-16:30
Room F1
Ramunė Kasperė, Svitlana Matvieieva
“How do you mean?” A corpus-based approach to interactive vagueness in classroom discourse across academic discipline cultures
16:30-17:00
F1
Amy Wang and Nicholas Smith
17:00-17:30
Coffee break
Intercultural pragmatic variations: misunderstandings and cooperation difficulties. The case of Egyptian users of English
17:30-18:00
Room F1
Lucia La Causa
Facilitating function-based methodologies in ELF research: the reliability of pragmatically annotated VOICE data
18:00-18:30
Room F1
Stefanie Riegler
Common ground and meta-pragmatic awareness: A cross-linguistic perspective of pragmatic markers
18:30-19:00
Room F1
Ildikó Vaskó, Hyunisa Rahmanadia
09:00-10:00
Registration opens
11:30-12:00
Coffee Break
“We may also need to look at this issue from a different angle”: the use of epistemic modality in the language of diplomats
12:00-12:30
Room G1
Sara Corrizzato
On the Stance-Marking Functions of the Korean Proximal Demonstrative
12:30-13:00
Room G1
Minju Kim
Dramatic discourse as intercultural discourse. The Case of Matei Vișniec’s “The Word Progress on My Mother’s Lips Doesn’t Ring True”
13:00-13:30
Room G1
Anabella-Gloria Niculescu-Gorpin, Lari Giorgescu
13:30 - 15:00
Lunch break
Exploring Pragmatics with AI: An Intercultural Communication Perspective
16:00-16:30
Room G1
Jennifer Monroe
Common Ground as (Inter)cultural ‘Inbetweeness’ in Human – Machine Communication: A Literary Pragmatic Perspective
16:30-17:00
Room G1
Ivana Trbojević Milošević
17:00-17:30
Coffee break
Discursive structure as a genre-marking quality of online discourses
17:30-18:00
Room G1
Júlia Ballagó
On Inherently and Contextually Aggressive Speech Acts
18:00-18:30
Room G1
Stefania Biscetti
Patterns of Thanking in Asian Englishes: A Local Grammar Based Investigation
18:30-19:00
Room G1
Jiayi Liang