“…More specifically, one of the aims is to have the English major university students examine how English has been used in the public signs, for example, identifying signs with inaccurate English (Rowland, 2013;Barrs, 2020;Ariffin et al, 2020), learning about the word-formation in English (Kweldju, 2021), increasing vocabularies and improving spelling (Dumanig & David, 2019), and learning the connotative meanings of English (Chestnut et al, 2013). Other aims are to investigate the EFL students" perception about the linguistic landscape projects (Chestnut et al, 2013;Dumanig & David, 2019) and develop students" critical thinking skills (Sayer, 2010;Rowland, 2013;Chestnut et al, 2013;Barrs, 2020) as well as critical language awareness (Wangdi & Savski, 2022) or metalinguistic awareness of the language varieties, including the Englishization phenomena in the public spaces (Sabaté-Dalmau, 2022). Meanwhile, for the young students at the primary level, the linguistic landscape project was expected to enable students to acquire basic literacy in English (Chern & Dooley, 2014) as well as to obtain some insights into the English signs outside the classroom from their perspectives as young EFL learners (Roos & Nicholas, 2020), and to raise the students" language awareness in their surroundings (Dagenais et al, 2009;Gorter et al, 2021).…”