Showing 101 - 120 results of 344 for search '"American English"', query time: 0.09s Refine Results
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    Investigating lexical variation and change in Malaysian twitter : a conceptual paper by Noraishah Gulnazir, Khazriyati Salehuddin

    Published 2022
    “…Interestingly, despite adopting British English in the national education system, American English is gaining prominence among Malaysians due to the widespread dissemination of American English through the media. …”
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    Article
  10. 110

    Uncovering the lexical variation and change in Malaysian English: a corpus-driven analysis by Noraishah Gulnazir, Khazriyati Salehuddin

    Published 2023
    “…Despite being traditionally based on the British English, Malaysians today seem to show increasing prominence in the use of American English due to its widespread dissemination on media. …”
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    Article
  11. 111

    Modality in spoken Malaysian English : a comparison with the supervarieties by Ang, Leng Hong, He, Mengyu, Hajar Abdul Rahim

    Published 2022
    “…As a new variety of English, it raises questions on how Malaysian English has developed from the historical input variety, i.e., British English and how resistant or accepting Malaysian English is to American English which is highly influential globally. …”
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  12. 112

    Main Difficulties of Comparative Studies of English Regionally Marked Nominative Units by D. L. Amitirova-Turgeneva

    Published 2018-05-01
    “…Much attention is paid to the importance of researches into the differences between British and American English as the most influential varieties of the English language. …”
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  13. 113

    Orthographic Variations of Ukrainian Surnames in Western Pennsylvania by Stephen P. Holutiak-Hallick

    Published 1972-09-01
    “…The discussion is based upon 1,100 Ukrainian surnames and their various American English renditions, totaling 3,000 names. The surnames, first recorded in American  English at the beginning of this century, were gathered from baptismal record books, parish lists and other archival material made available in Ukrainian Orthodox churches and organizations. …”
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  14. 114

    Judgments of Politeness in L2 Acquisition by Harada, Yoko

    Published 1996-01-01
    “…This paper examines Japanese ESL learners' perception and production of to whom and how politely one should speak and what expressions are appropriate to whom in American English. Speakers are expected to change the level of politeness, in both American English and Japanese, depending who the addressee is, but the two languages are different in how the speaker weighs factors such as age and status of the addressee and the speaker's familiarity to the in relation to others. …”
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  15. 115

    Customize sneaker for promoting brand (principle footwear) / Ahmad Harith Ibrahim by Ibrahim, Ahmad Harith

    Published 2015
    “…Athletic shoes are also known as training shoes or trainers (British English), sandshoes, gym boots or joggers (Australian English and Geordie English in the UK), running shoes, runners or gutties (Canadian English, Australian English, and Hiberno-English), sneakers (North American English and New Zealand English), tennis shoes (North American English and Australian English), gym shoes, tennies, sports shoes, sneaks, tackies (South African English and Hiberno-English), rubber shoes (Philippine English) or canvers (Nigerian English).…”
    Student Project
  16. 116

    HOSPITALITY TODAY AND TOMORROW by Ray F. IUNIUS

    Published 2017-08-01
    “…Regarding different ways “hospitality” is understood, the root of the problem lies in part in the different interpretations that hospitality has in different cultures and languages. In American English, for example, when we speak about “hospitality” we first think of it as an industry and only secondarily as an attribute of an individual or community. …”
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    Argumentation in legal discourse: A contrastive analysis of concession in Philippine and American Supreme Court decisions by Anne Richie G. Balgos

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…Moreover, this paper attempts to specify concessive preferences of Supreme Court judges that may somehow describe the standard discourse patterns in Philippine English and American English. The results of this study may be of significance and interest to Filipino students of Legal English, lawyers practicing foreign and legal affairs, and researchers of Philippine English and American English.…”
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  20. 120

    English get-passives: reassessing the frequencies across genres by Supakorn Phoocharoensil

    Published 2020
    “…This study investigates the get-passive in American English, with emphasis on its distribution in different text types and its semantic features characterized by co-occurring verbs. …”
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