Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies | National Inquiry Services Centre

Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies

ISSN: 1607-3614 (Print)
            1727-9461 (Online)
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

0.6 (2023) Impact Factor
0.6 (2023) 5-year IF

0.9 (2023) CiteScore

Accredited with the DHET (SAPSE)

Official Publication of the Southern African Linguistics and Applied Linguistics SocietyCo-published with RoutledgeClick here for Open Access options on this journal

Aims & Scope

Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies publishes articles on a wide range of linguistic topics and acts as a forum for research into ALL the languages of southern Africa. Original contributions are welcomed on any of the core areas of linguistics, applied linguistics, and language practice, particularly regarding matters that are relevant for the (southern) African context. Review articles and short research reports are also welcomed. Book reviews are solicited by the reviews editor. Articles in languages other than English are accompanied by an extended English summary.

Editors

Editor-in-Chief

Prof. Johanita Kirsten
UPSET Research Focus Area, North-West University, (Vanderbijlpark), South Africa. 

e-mail: Johanita.Kirsten@nwu.ac.za

Deputy Editors

Dr Amanda Lourens, Department of Afrikaans and Dutch, Stellenbosch University, South Africa
Dr Jacqui Lück, Department of Applied Language Studies, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa

Associate Editors

Dr Dumisile Mkhize, School of Languages for Education, North-West University (Potchefstroom), South Africa
Dr Mats’itso Morato-Maleke, Department of English, National University of Lesotho, Lesotho
Prof. CK Moropa, Department of Linguistics and Modern Languages, University of South Africa, South Africa
Dr Karien Redelinghuys, School of Languages, North-West University, South Africa
Dr Kristina Riedel, Department of Linguistics, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

Editorial Board

A. Beukes, University of Johannesburg, South Africa
B. Busch, University of Vienna, Austria
A. Chebanne, University of Botswana, Bostwana
A. Deumert, University of Cape Town, South Africa
R. Fasold, University of Georgetown, USA
L. Kasanga, University of Bahrain, Bahrain
N. Kula, University of Essex, UK
S. Mchombo, University of California at Berkeley, USA
R. Mesthrie, University of Cape Town, South Africa
T. Milani, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
M. Mwaniki, University of the Free State, South Africa
A. Pennycook, University of Technology, Australia
C. Myers-Scotton, Michigan State University, USA
R. Simango, Rhodes University, South Africa
G. Smithermann, Michigan State University, USA
L. de Staedler, Stellenbosch University, South Africa

Copy Editor

Graham C. Reed, NISC (Pty) Ltd, South Africa

Publishing Manager

Contact regarding all aspects relating to the production of the journal, including scheduling and copyright issues:

Dr. Kelly-Anne Frith 
NISC (Pty) Ltd
4 Speke Street
PO Box 377
Makhanda 6140
South Africa
Tel: +27 (0)46 622 9698
Fax: +27 (0)46 622 9550
e-mail: publishing@nisc.co.za

Published in association with the Southern African Linguistics and Applied Linguistics Society.

Latest Issue

Volume 42, Issue 4, 2024

Review Article

Functional stylistic studies to pedagogic discourse: a systematic review of literature
Author(s): Guoqiang Liu Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Malaysia , Wan Farah Wani Wan Fakhruddin Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Malaysia , Tianli Zhou Tongren Polytechnic College, China
Pages: 447–466
The ‘why’, ‘what’ and ‘how’ of pragmatics pedagogy in EFL/L2: meta-analysis review
Author(s): Mihretu Yihunie Yalew Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia , Dawit Amogne Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia , Birhanu Simegn Chanie Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia
Pages: 467–494

Research Article

Adoption of mixed method designs in applied linguistics research
Author(s): Abuelgasim SE Mohammed College of Science and Humanities, Prince Sattam bin Abdulaziz, University, Saudi Arabia
Pages: 495–506
Isocolon in EDM Sibiya’s novels: A stylo-syntactic evaluation
Author(s): Sizwe Zwelakhe Dlamini University of Johannesburg, South Africa
Pages: 507–516
Handling bad news in a male reproductive health clinic: a speech act perspective
Author(s): Melvin Ouma Rhodes University, South Africa , Furaha Chai Pwani University, Kenya
Pages: 531–541
Argumentation in police-suspect interactions in Ibadan, Nigeria
Author(s): Temidayo Akinrinlola McPherson University, Nigeria , Idayat Modupe Lamidi Koladaisi University, Nigeria
Pages: 542–553
Are research articles becoming more syntactically complex? Corpus-based evidence from research articles in applied linguistics and biology (1965–2015)
Author(s): Fan Pan Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China , Xinyi Zhou Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China
Pages: 554–571

Product Review

IRIS: Empowering language researchers with access to quality materials and instruments
Author(s): Hamzeh Moradi School of Foreign Studies, Guangzhou University, China
Pages: 585–590

Book Review

Metaphor, Sustainability, Transformation: Transdisciplinary Perspectives
Author(s): Yang Zhang University of Science and Technology Beijing, China , Jingyuan Zhang University of Science and Technology Beijing, China
Pages: 591–593
English L2 vocabulary learning and teaching: concepts, principles, and pedagogy
Author(s): Kai Zhang Ocean University of China, China , Yanxue Wu Ocean University of China, China , Xuemei Zhou Ocean University of China, China
Pages: 594–596

Contents

Instructions for Authors

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Author FAQ

 

Instructions for Authors

Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies (SALALS) publishes contributions from any of the disciplines in linguistics, both theoretical and applied. SALALS will publish research articles of 5 000–8 000 words and short communications of 2 000 words. Review papers will be considered only if they make an original conceptual or theoretical contribution to the field. Invited book reviews are also published.

Editorial policy: Submission of the manuscript implies that the material has not previously been published, nor it is being submitted elsewhere for publication. Contributions are accepted with the understanding that the authors have the authority for publication. Submission will be taken to imply transfer of copyright of the material to the publishers, NISC (Pty) Ltd. Contributions must conform to the principles outlined in Ethical considerations in research publication available for download below.

Papers submitted to SALALS will be viewed by at least two appropriately qualified and experienced referees to ensure that all articles accepted for publication are methodologically and conceptually sound and make an original contribution to the field. The journal adheres strictly to a double anonymized review process. The decision to accept a manuscript rests with the Editor-in Chief. Queries regarding manuscripts can be addressed to the Editorial Office. Contributions may be in any of the 11 official languages of South Africa. Articles in languages other than English must be accompanied by an abstract in English and an extended English summary (500–1 000 words). However, for authors who prefer to translate their entire article into English, we will make the original African language manuscript also available online, as supplementary information, linked to the published English-language version.

Submission: Articles should be submitted via the Taylor & Francis Submissions Portal. New users should first create an account. Manuscripts should adhere to the format criteria described below, and papers failing to do so will be returned to the authors to be corrected before being reviewed. Files should be submitted in MS Word format.

Manuscript presentation: Submitted manuscripts should contain the following sections:
Title page: The title (max. 20 words) should be concise description of the article content. List the author’s name(s), institutional address(es) and the e-mail address of the designated corresponding author.

Abstract: This should include the title of the paper and an abstract. The abstract is a concise statement of the scope of the work, the principal findings, and the conclusions and should not exceed 200 words.

Main text: All papers should include Introduction and Conclusion sections, but given the diverse range of papers that might be published in SALALS, we do not prescribe a standard format for the middle section.

Format – Manuscripts should be prepared in MSWord. The heading and the texts should be presented in 12-point Arial or Calibri font. The text should use 1.5 line spacing, with no extra line spacing, and should not include text columns, creative formatting or additional fonts. IPA characters should be in the Doulos SIL Unicode font or Charis DIL, which is available for download here. Headings should be formatted in sentence case – primary headings should be presented in bold, secondary headings in bold and italics, and tertiary headings in italics. Avoid footnotes, although endnotes may be used sparingly. Tables and graphs should not be part of the text but be prepared as separate files.

Editorial style – Manuscripts written in English should follow the UK spelling. For general style conventions consult a recent issue of the journal – free sample available here.

Referencing – Multiple citations in text must be separated by semicolons and cited chronologically in the form (Janks & Makalela 2013; Kadenge, 2012; Marais 2013; Milani, 2014). If previously published work is quoted directly, the citation must include the author, year of publication and page number as in (Nkadimeng 2013, p. 85). If more than two authors are cited in a reference, use only the name of the first author followed by ‘et al.’ For presenting the full reference list of references at the end of the manuscript, please consult our guide Reference Exemplars for Authors available for download below.The reference list should be in alphabetical order by first author, and include all authors of a given reference (do not use ‘et. al’ in the list),  likewise use full journal titles. URLs should be given only for references that are not available in print (such as a webpage) or ones that link to hard-to-find sources (e.g. municipal documents) and these URLs must be up-to-date at the time of submission and include an access date. 

Example reference list:

Makoni S, Mashiri P. 2007. Critical historiography: Does language planning in Africa need a construct of language as part of its theoretical apparatus? In: Makoni S and Pennycook A (eds), Disinventing and reconstituting languages. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. pp 362–394.

Rampton B. 2006. Language in late modernity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Makalela L. 2013. Translanguaging in Kasi-taal: Rethinking old language boundaries for new language planning. Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus 42: 111–125.

Tables and figures – Tables and figures should contain only information directly relevant to the content of the paper. Each table and figure must include a full, stand-alone caption, and each must be sequentially mentioned in the text. Highly stylised formatting should be avoided. Tables may include thin, horizontal lines but should not include cells with shading. Figures must conform to the journals style. Pay particular attention to line thickness, font and figure proportions, taking into account the journal’s printed page size. Costs of redrawing figures may be charged. Please refer to Figure Guidelines for Authors: format, style and technical considerations available for download below. For digital photographs or scanned images the resolution should be at least 300 dpi for colour or greyscale artwork and a minimum of 600 dpi for black line drawings. These can be saved (in order of preference) in PSD, PDF or JPEG format. Graphs, charts or maps can be saved in AI, PDF or EPS format. MS Office files (Word, Powerpoint, Excel) are also acceptable but DO NOT EMBED Excel graphs or Powerpoint slides in a MS Word document. More detailed technical information is given in Figure Guidelines for Authors.

Other information:
Page charges: A page charge of ZAR175 per page (for African contributors – excl. VAT, where applicable) or USD15 (for other contributors) is levied by NISC. Authors who do not receive subsidies from their institutions may apply to the Editor to have the page charges waived.

Open access: Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies is a hybrid journal which allows authors the option of publishing their article Open Access for a set fee. Further details are given on the Open Access at NISC page. 

Special Issues: Proposals for special issues should be sent to the Editor-in-Chief. 

Downloads

Figure Guidelines for Authors

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Figure FAQs

PDF File | Size: 1.25 MB download »view online »

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