books by subject
Linguistics References
Oxford Wordpower: Słownik Angielsko-Polski/Polsko-Angielski: S Ownik Angielsko-Polski/Polsko-Angielski
Marxism and Science: Analysis of an Obsession
Bad Medicine: Doctors Doing Harm Since Hippocrates
A Financial History of Western Europe (Second Edition)
Analyzing English in a Global Context: A Reader (Teaching English Language Worldwide)
Authority in Language: Investigating Language Standardisation and Prescription (Language, Education & Society Series)
The English Languages (Canto)
Analysing Genre: Language Use in Professional Settings (Applied Linguistics and Language Study)
Language and the Law (Language In Social Life)
Relations and Functions within and around Language (Open Linguistics Series)
From Old English to Standard English: A Course Book in Language Variation Across Time (Studies in English Language)
Terms in Systemic Linguistics
Genre and Institutions: Social Processes in the Workplace and School (Open Linguistics S.)
The Routledge Language and Cultural Theory Reader (Politics of Language)
Lexical Semantics (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics)
Dictionaries: The Art and Craft of Lexicography
Methods for Critical Discourse Analysis (Introducing Qualitative Methods series)
Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes
Chambers Concise Dictionary
Philosophy and the Brain (Opus Books)
Barricades and Borders: Europe 1800-1914 (Short Oxford History of the Modern World)
Word Drops: A Sprinkling of Linguistic Curiosities
Oxford Bookworms Library: Level 1:: Mutiny on the Bounty: Level 1: 400-Word Vocabulary (Oxford Bookworms ELT)
Roman Catholicism in England from the Elizabethan Settlement to the Second Vatican Council (OPUS S.)
Criticism and Modernity: Aesthetics, Literature, and Nations in Europe and Its Academies
Literature as Communication: The foundations of mediating criticism: 78 (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series)
Difference in Translatn Pb
Carnival, Hysteria and Writing: Collected Essays and Autobiography of Allon White
The Politics of Discourse: The Standard Language Question in British Cultural Debates