“…The studies are firmly rooted in the functional and usage‐based tradition that argues for the social nature of language and learning. In the introduction, Pekarek Doehler & Eskildsen (2022, this issue) situate the studies within an integrated framework building on usage‐based models of language and L2 learning (e.g., Ellis, 2002, 2015; Hopper, 1987; Tomasello, 2003) interactional linguistics (Couper–Kuhlen & Selting, 2018; Hall, 2019; Mushin & Pekarek Doehler, 2021; Ochs et al., 1996; Thompson et al., 2015) and ethnomethodological conversation analysis (for recent overviews, see Hellermann et al., 2019, and Kunitz et al., 2021, for CA‐SLA in the wild and in the classroom, respectively). As Pekarek Doehler and Eskildsen argue, these fields converge in their conceptualization of linguistic patterns as tied to communicative and interactional functions.…”