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  1. Spouse. Michael Halliday. Ruqaiya Hasan (3 July 1931 [a] – 24 June 2015) was a professor of linguistics who held visiting positions and taught at various universities in England. Her last appointment was at Macquarie University in Sydney, from which she retired as emeritus professor in 1994.

  2. 26 de may. de 2019 · Michael Halliday and Ruqaiya leave behind their son Neil and his partner Shaye. They also leave behind a legacy of scholarship that redefines the way we talk, think, write, speak, mean, use and teach language and the immense possibilities that the gift of language has to offer.

  3. 5 de jul. de 2015 · This was last week, after Ruqaiya Hasan, Emeritus Professor of Linguistics, Macquarie University, Sydney, passed away on June 24, suddenly and peacefully. Her husband Professor M.A.K. Halliday was ...

  4. 28 de jun. de 2015 · Sisters Ruqaiya Hasan and Zakia Sarwar, Karachi 2014. Photo: Huma Nadra Quraishi It was Wednesday, June 24, just after visiting hours began at 3 pm. Khala Ammi was sitting up in bed, talking to her husband and intellectual partner of over 50 years.

  5. 1 de oct. de 2013 · ABSTRACT. Cohesion in English is concerned with a relatively neglected part of the linguistic system: its resources for text construction, the range of meanings that are speciffically associated with relating what is being spoken or written to its semantic environment. A principal component of these resources is 'cohesion'.

  6. 23 de abr. de 2020 · A spectre is haunting linguistics and education: the prematurely buried legacy of Basil Bernstein, Michael Halliday, Ruqaiya Hasan and Karl Marx. On the one hand, this spectre seems to demand that we treat both language and learning as natural wholes, instead of reducing them to natural sciences like phonetics or neuroscience and social sciences like discourse analysis and curriculum studies ...

  7. The essays in this volume go a long way to making sure that Ruqaiya Hasan’s contribution to our understanding of how language works as humanity s resource for being and making meaning will live long past her beautiful life, Humanity is richer and better for the life she lived among us.” (Jonathan Webster, Functions of Language, Vol. 25 (2), 2018)