Book Chapter
                  Haugh, Michael and Weinglass, Lara  (2020). “The Great Australian Pastime”: pragmatic and semantic perspectives on taking the piss. Studies in ethnopragmatics, cultural semantics, and intercultural communication: ethnopragmatics and semantic analysis. (pp. 95-117) edited by Kerry Mullan, Bert Peeters and Lauren Sadow. Singapore: Springer Singapore. doi: 10.1007/978-981-32-9983-2_6
                
              Journal Articles
                  Ekberg, Katie, Ekberg, Stuart, Weinglass, Lara, Herbert, Anthony, Rendle‐Short, Johanna, Bluebond‐Langner, Myra, Yates, Patsy, Bradford, Natalie and Danby, Susan (2022). Attending to child agency in paediatric palliative care consultations: adults’ use of tag questions directed to the child. Sociology of Health and Illness, 44 (3), 566-585. doi: 10.1111/1467-9566.13437
                
              
                  Ekberg, Katie, Ekberg, Stuart, Weinglass, Lara and Danby, Susan (2021). Pandemic morality-in-action: accounting for social action during the COVID-19 pandemic. Discourse and Society, 32 (6) 09579265211023232, 666-688. doi: 10.1177/09579265211023232
                
              
                  Ekberg, Katie, Weinglass, Lara, Ekberg, Stuart, Danby, Susan and Herbert, Anthony (2020). The pervasive relevance of COVID-19 within routine paediatric palliative care consultations during the pandemic: A conversation analytic study. Palliative Medicine, 34 (9), 269216320950089-1219. doi: 10.1177/0269216320950089
                
              
                  Haugh, Michael and Weinglass, Lara (2018). Divided by a common language? Jocular quips and (non-)affiliative responses in initial interactions among American and Australian speakers of English. Intercultural Pragmatics, 15 (4), 533-562. doi: 10.1515/ip-2018-0019
                
              Thesis
                  Weinglass, Larissa (2024). Humour and laughter at work: sustained humour episodes in Australian blue-collar workplaces. PhD Thesis, School of Languages and Cultures, The University of Queensland. doi: 10.14264/2dfba1a