SEAMJ
Guidelines
All Volumes (Open Access)
Volume 16 (2016)
- Ishamina Athirah, TH in Misunderstandings in Brunei English, pp. 1–7 (PDF Version)
- Nur Raihan Mohamad, The Status of Brunei English based on the Phonology of Local Teachers and Undergraduates, pp. 8–15 (PDF Version)
- Rungroj Chorbwhan and James McLellan, First Language Transfer and the Acquisition of English Collocations by Thai Learners, pp. 16–27 (PDF Version)
- Kamsiah Haji Abdullah and Mardina Haji Mahadi, Talking and Teaching from E-stories: Analysis of Conversations in Three-Generation Families in Brunei Darussalam, pp. 28–38 (PDF Version)
- Paolo Coluzzi, Levels of Vitality and Efforts to Maintain Bidayuh and Mah Meri, pp. 39–47 (PDF Version)
- Tabtip Kanchanapoomi, Wannapa Trakulkasemsuk and Sonthida Keyuravong, Business Discourse Patterns in an ELF Setting between Thai and Burmese Professionals, pp. 48–64 (PDF Version)
- Siti Faahirah Binti Haji Rozaimee, Code-switching in Brunei: Evidence from the map task, pp. 65–81 (PDF Version)
- Penpitcha Prakaiborisuth and Wannapa Trakulkasemsuk, Bless you! Why?: A Study of Thai Learners’ Understanding of Basic English Pragmatics, pp. 82–88 (PDF Version)
- Shufang Xu, Alveolar and Post-alveolar Mergers in Brunei Mandarin, pp. 89–102 (PDF Version)
- Martie Geiger-Ho & Kong Ho, Nurturing the Creative Industries in Brunei Darussalam as a Form of Cultural Studies, pp. 103–119 (PDF Version)
- Khairunnisa Ghani, Overlapping in Male and Female Speech in Brunei English Informal Conversations, pp. 120–128 (PDF Version)
- Sufi Redzwan, Rhoticity in Brunei and Singapore English, pp. 129–137 (PDF Version)
- Hannah M. Y. Ho & Frank Dhont, Bombs as Potent Reminders of War: A Literary-Historical Study of Negara Brunei Darussalam, pp. 138–150 (PDF Version)
- Sharifah Nurul Huda Alkaff, Review of English in Malaysia: Current Use and Status, edited by Toshiko Yamaguchi and David Deterding, p. 151 (PDF Version)