Research Article
Applying Newmark's Five Cultural Categories on Persian Cultural Terms

Nadia Ghazanfari Moghaddam; Mohammad Reza Hashemi

Volume 47, Issue 2 , July 2014, Pages 1-21

https://doi.org/10.22067/lts.v47i2.21062

Abstract
  Language is a system by which all sorts of thoughts and concepts are transmitted and exchanged. On the other hand, translation performs like a tool which eases this exchange of information and makes it interculturally possible. Yet, the translation of cultural terms and concepts has always been a tricky ...  Read More

Research Article
Resistance and Challenge against Dominant Literary Discourse in Nima Youshij and Walt Whitman’s Poetry

Fazel Asadi Amjad; Mohammad Reza Rowhanimanesh

Volume 47, Issue 2 , July 2014, Pages 23-44

https://doi.org/10.22067/lts.v47i2.39543

Abstract
  Nima Youshij, the founder of modern Persian poetry, composed several poems challenging conventional Persian meters, forms and contents. He manipulated rhyme, rhythm, and length of a verse. Similarly, Walt Whitman, the father of free verse in American literature, published Leaves of Grass to challenge ...  Read More

Research Article
A Sociological Look into Speech Act of Cursing: A comparison of Persian and English Languages

Reza Pishghadam; Fatemeh Vahidnia; Ailin Firoozian Pooresfahani

Volume 47, Issue 2 , July 2014, Pages 45-71

https://doi.org/10.22067/lts.v47i2.35404

Abstract
  Considering the reciprocal relationship between culture and language and the fact that culture finds its reflection in the language people employ, we can understand the society’s world-view through culturology of language.Hence, the current research is about to dissect and analyze the speech act ...  Read More

Research Article
Modality in Translation: A Case Study of Persian Translations of Woolf’s Narrative Style in The Waves

Somaye Delzendehrooy; Helen Ouliaeinia

Volume 47, Issue 2 , July 2014, Pages 73-93

https://doi.org/10.22067/lts.v47i2.40734

Abstract
  In discussing the notion of style, whether in literary or linguistic studies, we are in fact referring to the author's language habits. That is why we can assign each writer a particular style and call that style in the name of its author, for example, Shakespearian, Joycean, or Woolfian style. Given ...  Read More

Research Article
The Relationship between Thinking Styles and Metacognitive Awareness among Iranian EFL Learners

Farrokhlagha Heidari; Zahra Bahrami

Volume 47, Issue 2 , July 2014, Pages 95-106

https://doi.org/10.22067/lts.v47i2.44648

Abstract
  The present study explored the relationship between thinking styles and metacognitive awareness of Iranian EFL university students majoring in English Literature, English Translation, and English Language Teaching. In addition, the study pursued whether thinking styles could act as the predictors of ...  Read More

Research Article
Gender Representation in American English File Textbook

Ali Roohai; Somayeh Akbarpour

Volume 47, Issue 2 , July 2014, Pages 107-131

https://doi.org/10.22067/lts.v47i2.30619

Abstract
  Gender is still one distinction in our society as well as textbooks, which is the core of materials in second/foreignlanguage learning/teaching. Gender bias and inequality can exert particular ideologies on learners and negatively affect their views about language learning. This study is an attempt to ...  Read More