Ampersand (Oxford, UK)

journal

Ampersand (Oxford, UK) is …
instance of (P31):
academic journalQ737498
open-access journalQ773668
scientific journalQ5633421

External links are
P6981ACNP journal ID3102768
P8375Crossref journal ID263495
P5115Directory of Open Access Journals ID2215-0390
P5963Elsevier journal IDampersand
P8903HAL journal ID137594
P236ISSN2215-0390
P7363ISSN-L2215-0390
P1277JUFO ID84016
P1055NLM Unique ID101657859
P856official websitehttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/aip/22150390
P10283OpenAlex IDS2898414600
P7662Scilit journal ID2795475
P1156Scopus source ID6000159317

P972catalogDirectory of Open Access JournalsQ1227538
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivativesQ6937225
P17countryUnited KingdomQ145
P495country of originUnited KingdomQ145
P8875indexed in bibliographic reviewScopusQ371467
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectphilologyQ40634
P123publisherElsevier BVQ746413
P1476titleAmpersand
Ampersand (Oxford, UK)

Reverse relations

published in (P1433)
Q127783154A phono-ethnic story of Nigerian English: As told by high vowels
Q127204628Determinants of spelling proficiency in hearing and deaf graduate students: The presentation of medial glottal stop
Q127100896Do me a syntax: Doggo memes, language games and the internal structure of English
Q128714295Hesitation, orientation, and flow: A taxonomy for deep temporal translation architectures
Q130160285Individual variation in reduction processes in L2 English academic textchat
Q130197437Language exposure practices among Hasidic Yiddish-Hebrew speaking children – in support of Yiddish vitality in Israel
Q109317594Low German with a Swedish twist - Contact-induced word order transfer in the 15th century
Q127128323Negative Concord in Jamaican
Q128920862Our speech is filled with others' words: Understanding university student and instructor opinions towards paraphrasing through a Bakhtinian lens
Q128944444Questions and epistemic stance: Some examples from Italian conversations
Q126812135Same old paska or new shit? On the stylistic boundaries and social meaning potentials of swearing loanwords in Finnish
Q114858972Stemming for Better Indonesian Text-to-Phoneme
Q128531324The Daily Linguistic Practice Interview: A new instrument to assess language use and experience in minority language children and their effect on reading skills
Q30394592The formulaic schema in the minds of two generations of native speakers
Q126987809The social meaning potential of loanwords: Empirical explorations of lexical borrowing as expression of (social) identity
Q109430496Three cases of phraseological borrowing: A comparative study of as if, Oh wait and the ever construction in the Scandinavian languages
Q128772644Two levels of information packaging and cognitive operations during simultaneous interpreting: An analysis via additional demonstratives

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