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Original Articles

Nonlinguistic influences on lexical selection: Evidence from double entendres

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Pages 124-135 | Published online: 02 Jun 2009

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A. Elizabeth Lindsey. (1996) Affect‐congruency in message content: A preliminary evaluation of two accounts. Communication Quarterly 44:4, pages 440-451.
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JohnH. Powers. (1995) On the intellectual structure of the human communication discipline. Communication Education 44:3, pages 191-222.
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MichaelT. Motley. (1992) Mindfulness in solving communicators’ dilemmas. Communication Monographs 59:3, pages 306-314.
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MichaelT. Motley. (1990) Communication as interaction: A reply to Beach and Bavelas. Western Journal of Speech Communication 54:4, pages 613-623.
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Carl Camden & Steve Verba. (1986) Communication and consciousness: Applications in marketing. Western Journal of Speech Communication 50:1, pages 64-73.
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MichaelT. Motley. (1986) Consciousness and intentionality in communication: A preliminary model and methodological approaches. Western Journal of Speech Communication 50:1, pages 3-23.
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Articles from other publishers (4)

Stuart McKelvie & Lionel Gilbert Standing. (2018) Teaching Psychology Research Methodology Across the Curriculum to Promote Undergraduate Publication: An Eight-Course Structure and Two Helpful Practices. Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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Brant B. Burleson & Sally Planalp. (2000) Producing Emotion(al) Messages. Communication Theory 10:2, pages 221-250.
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Renee Edwards & Theodore ClevengerJr.Jr.. (1990) The effects of schematic and affective processes on metaphorical invention. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 19:2, pages 91-102.
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Michael T. Motley. (2016) The Production of Verbal Slips and Double Entendres as Clues to the Efficiency of Normal Speech Production. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 4:3-4, pages 275-293.
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