Keyword [statements] Result: 121 - 140 | Page: 7 of 8 |
121. | Genre Features of Personal Statements by Chinese English-as-an-Additional-Language Writers: A Corpus-Driven Study |
122. | Effects of Oncologist Communication Style about Bad Health and Oncologist Gender on Emotional Arousal, Irrational Statements, Information Recall, and the Physician-Patient Relationship |
123. | Causation, quasi-realism, and David Hume |
124. | Coue revisited: An Internet-based investigation of repetition and positive self-statements on depression, self-esteem, and automatic thoughts |
125. | Evidencing sensemaking: A speech act theory study of metaphors in organizational mission statements |
126. | Socially prescribed perfectionism: Moderating the relationship between shyness and other-efficacy discrepancy |
127. | The production of Catholic sexual discourse: A Foucauldian analysis of the discursive power of the American laity since Vatican Council II |
128. | American Indian tribal colleges: Mission statements, degrees and certificates, and American Indian courses |
129. | Thematic inferences: Readers' judgments of various interpretations of theme in short fiction |
130. | Revealing positions: The role of point of view in the understanding of utterances |
131. | Signaling influence: Presidential statements and their power over policy |
132. | Politeness responses to in-group statements of prejudice: Challenging messages and maintaining relationship quality |
133. | Visual arts and architecture in ecumenical statements of the Holy See and the World Council of Churches, 1982--1997: Issues of theological anthropology |
134. | Contextual entailments and constraints with verbal irony |
135. | Categorical syllogisms |
136. | Realist critiques of Dummett's 'On the Reality of the Past': A realist approach to time and truth |
137. | Accessibility of goal information in a mental model |
138. | The emergence of political statements and political theology in the history of the Taiwanese Presbyterian Church |
139. | A descriptive study of verbal statements made by Saudi Arabian students about Islamic and Western art objects |
140. | TRANSPARENCY, AMBIGUITY, AND OPACITY AS A CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR STUDYING INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION |
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