Aim & Scope
The Journal of World Languages explores the linguistic, communicative, and socio-cultural implications of the global spread of major languages and the impact this is having on the world's linguistic mapping. The number of languages which now qualify as a world language is increasing. The Journal of World Languages encourages studies of the roles of education, the media, the economy, etc. in contributing to the growth of a world language, and the significant effects this phenomenon is having in both social and ecological contexts. The Journal of World Languages is a cross-disciplinary journal whose coverage includes but is not limited to the following research areas: Discourse analysis; Translation studies; Functional linguistics; Language teaching; Ecolinguistics; Language policy; Sociolinguistics, language variations, and dialectology. [1]
2024
Language and ecology in social imaginaries: ecolinguistic perspectives
Journal of World Languages , 2024
Transmigrant identities and attitudes: the case of a Pangasinan-American family
S Bernardo-Hinesley , A Arias Álvarez
Journal of World Languages , 2024
Lexical niche and sustainability: an ecolinguistic perspective
Journal of World Languages , 2024
Grammar, cohesion and the co-ordination of the ‘self’ in a current psychotherapeutic technique
D Butt , A Moore , C Henderson-Brooks , K Khoo
Journal of World Languages , 2024
Japanese mood and modality in systemic functional linguistics
Journal of World Languages , 2024
Systemic functional linguistics: advances and applications
Journal of World Languages , 2024