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Channels - The Commodified Happiness: The Only Established Source of Meaning in Oscar Wilde’s The Happy Prince and The Nightingale and the Rose :: FRELIP Discovery
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The Commodified Happiness: The Only Established Source of Meaning in Oscar Wilde’s The Happy Prince and The Nightingale and the Rose
The Rose and The Poppy
Daoist Philosophy and Stephen Mitchell’s The Frog Prince: A Fairy Tale for Consenting Adults
Wild Horses
The Importance of Word Type, Meaning and Functıon in Translation
Exclamatives as means of exhibiting emotions in Henry James’s Washington Square: Pragmatic aspect
“Passing a looped and knotted string between their hands”. The Bible, the Women’s Liberation Movement and Women’s Bonds in Michèle Roberts’s The Wild Girl
The analysis of youth-related anglicisms among Bosnian youth - knowledge of their original form and meaning and attitudes towards them
A Happy Lie
Against level-3-only analyses in corpus linguistics
Rychter, Ewa, 2021. “Passing a looped and knotted string between their hands”. The Bible, the Women’s Liberation Movement and Women’s Bonds in Michèle Roberts’s The Wild Girl. Prague Journal of English Studies, Volume 10, Number 1, pages 23-41. doi: 10.2478/pjes-2021-0002
Exploring Lay Meanings of Happiness in Contemporary India: A Qualitative Inquiry
An analysis of lexicogrammatical development in English textbooks in Turkey: A usage-based construction grammar approach
Euphemistic strategies in Algerian Arabic and American English
Intertextuality in media discourse: A reader’s perspective
The Materialisation of “torrential languages” within the Avant-Garde: Mina Loy, James Joyce, and Aesthetic Modernism
Existential Dualism and Absurdity: Modernist Theatricality in Wole Soyinka’s Death and the King’s Horseman and Samuel Beckett’s Endgame
The “bull goose looney” as a Totem Guide for Chief’s Writing Himself to Freedom
The Mitford Voice: A Diachronic Inquiry into the “Upper-Crust” Accent of the Mitford Sisters
Naomi Alderman’s The Power: A Speculative Feminist Dystopian Fiction Mirroring the Here and Now
Laughing with Beckett in Waiting for Godot and Endgame
“Her tears fell with the dews at even”: The Ekphrastic and Intertextual Dialogue between Victorian Poetry and Pre-Raphaelite Painting
Book Review: Ladislav Vít The Landscapes of W.H. Auden’s Interwar Poetry: Roots and Routes (New York and London: Routledge, 2022). 143 pp
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Ecophilosophy in “Rappaccini’s Daughter”
Through linguo-stylistic analysis to a new retranslation of the ballad “Hasanaginica“