Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Discourse Studies and confident use of methodologies relevant to CDS. Previous knowledge of methodologies relevant to social media research, with a preference for corpus linguistics and social network
-
publications, conference presentations, and ultimately a PhD thesis. The PhD thesis has to be completed within four years. Being part of a cutting-edge research programme, you will receive research training as
-
(University of Granada), dr. Lotte van Poppel (University of Groningen) and dr. Janina Wildfeuer (University of Groningen). The position is part of the project The Normativity of Multimodal Arguments, which is
-
will you do? In your daily work as researcher analytical chemistry, you will: act as the researcher for a number of projects, mainly on governmental tasks, but also in PPS- and EU-projects in the theme
-
, University of Groningen) invites applications for a fully-funded four-year PhD position in the fields of sociolinguistics, experimental pragmatics and cognitive linguistics. The PhD candidate will work on the
-
, experimental pragmatics and cognitive linguistics. The PhD candidate will work on the project “Don’t call me by your name: A cross-linguistic investigation of the social meaning of address forms” and contribute
-
historical and theoretical aims. This PhD position offers a unique opportunity to work in an inspiring international and diverse environment and to acquire valuable research experience at a top-ranked European
-
with extensive secondary source reading in Spanish and/or Portuguese to pursue a combination of historical and theoretical aims. This PhD position offers a unique opportunity to work in an inspiring
-
PhD in Film Studies: Cinema’s Mediterranean Connections, Archives, Flows and Southern Epistemologies
are part of the Film and Contemporary Audiovisual Media theme group within the Research Center for Arts in Society (AiS) of the University of Groningen. Dr. Rigoletto and Dr. Fidotta will be daily
-
-waiting – were successful spies in seventeenth-century England. This is what Nadine Akkerman describes in her book Invisible Agents, the first analysis of the role of female spies in the seventeenth century