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Sociolinguistics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2004

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04–660 Chen Eoyang, Eugene (Indiana U., USA & Lingnan U., Hong Kong). English as a postcolonial tool: anti-hegemonic subversions in a hegemonic language. English Today (Cambridge, UK), 19, 4 (2003), 23–29.

04–661 Heinz, Bettina (Bowling Green State U., USA; Email: bheinz@bgnet.bgsu.edu). Backchannel responses as strategic responses in bilingual speakers' conversations. Journal of Pragmatics (Amsterdam, The Netherlands), 35, 7 (2003), 1113–1142.

04–662 Hinkel, Eli (Seattle U., USA; Email: elihinkel@aol.com). Adverbial markers and tone in L1 and L2 students' writing. Journal of Pragmatics (Amsterdam, The Netherlands), 35, 7 (2003), 1049–1068.

04–663 Mackie, Ardiss (Okanagan University College, B.C., Canada). Race and desire: toward critical literacies for ESL. TESL Canada Journal (Burnaby, B.C., Canada), 20, 2 (2003), 23–37.

04–664 MacPherson, Seonaigh (Manitoba U., Canada). TESOL for biolinguistic sustainability: the ecology of English as aLingua Mundi. TESL Canada Journal (Burnaby, B.C., Canada), 20, 2 (2003), 1–22.

04–665 Marsh, Jackie (Sheffield U., UK). One-way traffic? Connections between literacy practices at home and in the nursery. British Educational Research Journal (London, UK), 29, 3 (2003), 369–382.

04–666 Matthews, Mona W. and Kesner, John (Georgia State U., USA). Children learning with peers: the confluence of peer status and literacy competence within small-group literacy events. Reading Research Quarterly (Newark, DE, USA), 38, 2 (2003), 208–234.

04–667 Spencer-Oatey, Helen and Jiang, Wenying (UK eUniversities Worldwide, UK; Email: hspencer-oatey@ukeu.com). Explaining cross-cultural pragmatic findings: moving from politeness maxims to sociopragmatic interactional principles (SIPs). Journal of Pragmatics (Amsterdam, The Netherlands), 35, 10–11 (2003), 1633–1650.

04–668 Zhu, Huimin (China). Globalization and new ELT challenges in China. An account of the teaching of English and the kinds of English used in a vast, varied, and rapidly changing society. English Today (Cambridge, UK), 19, 4 (2003), 36–41.

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© 2003 Cambridge University Press