Fulltext version
| Specialised Languages and Multimedia. Linguistic and Cross-Cultural Issues | Details PDF | 
| Elena Manca, Francesca Bianchi | 1-474 | 
| Title page | Details PDF | 
| 1-2 | 
| Table of contents | Details PDF | 
| 3-4 | 
| Introduction | Details PDF | 
| Elena Manca, Francesca Bianchi | 5-19 | 
Part 1
| Part 1- Popularisation of scientific and technical knowledge | Details PDF | 
| 21-22 | 
| “Tiny new ingredients are a big concern”. The popularization of nanotechonologies in environmental organizations’ and institutions’ publications | Details pdf | 
| Franca Poppi, Annalisa Sezzi | 23-43 | 
| A corpus-based approach to the analysis of the video abstract. A phase-based model | Details pdf | 
| Francesca Coccetta | 45-65 | 
| “Health for kids”. Multimodal resources for popularising health knowledge on websites for children | Details pdf | 
| Giuliana Diani | 67-93 | 
| Knowledge dissemination in the Dinosaur Train animated series. How to popularise palaeontology for pre-school children | Details pdf | 
| Daniela Cesiri | 95-115 | 
| How to do things without words. Multisemiotic visualization in LEGO vs. IKEA building instructions | Details pdf | 
| Stefania Consonni | 117-139 | 
Part 2
| Part 2 - Medical Discourse | Details PDF | 
| 141-142 | 
| Knowledge dissemination for social change. A Multimodal Discourse Analysis of an online health information service | Details pdf | 
| Rosita Belinda Maglie, Chiara Abbatantuono | 143-163 | 
| Digital communication of the International Human Genome Editing Summit. Exploring the multimodal potential of conference presentations | Details pdf | 
| Jekaterina Nikitina | 165-185 | 
Part 3
| Part 3 - Tourism Discourse | Details PDF | 
| 211-212 | 
| Specialized and culture-bound knowledge dissemination through spoken tourism discourse: Multimodal strategies in guided tours and documentaries | Details pdf | 
| Veronica Bonsignori, Gloria Cappelli | 213-239 | 
| A multimodal and cross-cultural analysis of farmhouse holidays websites. A comparison between Italy, Germany and Austria | Details pdf | 
| Davide Palmisano | 241-264 | 
Part 4
| Part 4 - Business Discourse | Details PDF | 
| 265-266 | 
| How to construct corporate identity and reputation. Is the ‘about us’ page a micro-genre? | Details pdf | 
| Sandra Petroni | 267-290 | 
| Financial narratives. A multimodal analysis of newspaper articles | Details pdf | 
| Olga Denti | 291-312 | 
Part 5
| Part 5 - Translation and Multimedia | Details PDF | 
| 313-314 | 
| The translation of legal references in the Italian dubbing of a US TV series. A corpus-based analysis | Details pdf | 
| Annalisa Sandrelli | 315-340 | 
| Accents and stereotypes in animated films. The case of Zootopia (2016) | Details pdf | 
| Luca Valleriani | 361-378 | 
| Developing awareness of interference errors in translation. An English-Spanish pilot study in popular science and audiovisual transcripts | Details pdf | 
| Rosa Rabadán, Camino Gutiérrez-Lanza | 379-404 | 
Part 6
| Part 6 - Specialised Discourse in the Teaching and Learning Practice | Details PDF | 
| 405-406 | 
| The learning dialogue of university language students in a digital environment for online text annotations | Details pdf | 
| Maria Bortoluzzi, Ilaria Boato, Giorgia Salvador, Ivana Marenzi | 407-431 | 
| The MWSWeb Project: Accessing medical discourse in video hosting websites | Details pdf | 
| Anthony Baldry, Deirdre Kantz, Anna Loiacono, Ivana Marenzi, Davide Taibi, Francesca Tursi | 433-472 | 
| Colophon | Details PDF | 
| 473-474 | 

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e-ISSN: 2239-0359

