LINGUIST List 17.1963
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Wed Jul 05 2006
Calls: Phonology/Germany;East Asian Ling/Canada
Editor for this issue: Kevin Burrows
<kevin linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Baris
Kabak,
Phonological Domains: Universals and Deviations
2. Manami
Hirayama,
International Conference on East Asian Linguistics
Message 1: Prosodic Domains: Universals and Deviations
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Date: 04-Jul-2006
From: Baris Kabak <Baris.Kabak uni-konstanz.de>
Subject: Phonological Domains: Universals and Deviations
Full Title: Phonological Domains: Universals and Deviations
Date: 28-Jan-2007 - 02-Feb-2007
Location: Siegen, Germany
Contact Person: Baris Kabak
Meeting Email: < click here to access email >
Web Site: http://ling.uni-konstanz.de/pages/home/dgfs2007/index.htm
Linguistic Field(s): Applied Linguistics; Morphology; Phonology; Typology
Call Deadline: 01-Aug-2006
Meeting Description:
This workshop, co-organized by Janet Grijzenhout and Baris Kabak (University of Konstanz), will investigate the nature of morphosyntax-phonology mapping and the principles that govern the prosodization of morphological elements, with special attention to cross-linguistic variation. It will take place at the University of Siegen, Germany as part of the 29th Annual Meeting of the German Linguistics Society (DGfS).
Phonology Workshop (Arbeitsgruppe 12) at the 29th Annual Meeting of the German Linguistics Society (DGfS) PHONOLOGICAL DOMAINS: UNIVERSALS AND DEVIATIONS University of Siegen, Germany February 28th - March 2nd, 2007 Organizers: Janet Grijzenhout Baris Kabak (University of Konstanz) Keynote speakers: TBA Workshop description: Systematic phonological alternations often seem to be bound to a particular phonological domain. The theory of Prosodic Phonology (e.g. Selkirk 1980, 1986; Nespor & Vogel 1986; Hayes 1989) holds that speech is hierarchically organized into constituents that are not necessarily isomorphic to syntactic constituents. Previous literature has largely dealt with how morphological elements can be organized into the prosodic structure. It has been reported that within individual languages as well as cross-linguistically, there can be systematic differences in the prosodization of function words. For instance, Selkirk (1984) states that the principles of syntax-phonology mapping are blind to the presence of functional categories. Closer examination reveals that not only function words, but also various other morphological elements - e.g. suffixes and clitics - may vary with respect to the way they are prosodized. Moreover, within one syntactic category, elements may belong to different prosodic categories (e.g. the German preposition statt 'instead of' seems to function as a prosodic word, whereas in 'in' does not form a prosodic word of its own). Furthermore, morphological elements may behave as part of a prosodic domain x with respect to a (set of) phonological process(es) while they may seem to belong to another domain in the context of other processes (e.g., Turkish instrumental suffix -lA, which undergoes vowel harmony but fails to receive word-level right-most default stress). Also, the rules posited for morphology-phonology mapping seem to be based on circular logic: a syntactic category may determine the onset of a particular prosodic domain in which, for example, stress assignment takes place, but at the same time presence or absence of primary stress suggests the inclusion or exclusion of a particular element from that very same domain. Apart from various issues concerning phrasing algorithms and syntax-phonology mapping, the precise nature of the prosodic hierarchy and its various components have also been controversial. While, for instance, several researchers questioned the necessity of the Clitic Group (e.g., Zec 1988; Booij 1988; Peperkamp 1997), others argue that the theory predicts even less structure than is attested across the languages of the world (e.g., recent work by Balthasar Bickel and colleagues at the University of Leipzig). In this workshop, we are specifically interested in the nature of the morphosyntax-phonology mapping and the principles that govern the prosodization of morphological elements, with special attention to cross-linguistic variation. In this respect, the following issues will be addressed: (i) how much of mapping rules is given by universal grammar versus language-specific principles?, (ii) do morphological elements bear any (lexical) information with respect to their morphophonological categorization (cf. Inkelas 1989) and how should that information be represented?, (iii) is there a set of universal prosodic domains and are all of the domains suggested in the literature necessary? We invite linguists who work on prosodic phonology and phonology-morphosyntax interface from all perspectives and methodologies including those working in the fields of typology, historical linguistics, psycholinguistics, and language modeling. General theoretical discussions and analyses of language-specific issues are equally welcome. Talks will be 20 minutes each, with 10 minutes of discussion. Abstract submission procedure: Please send an anonymous abstract of max. 500 words, as a text file or Word file, to prosodicdomains uni-konstanz.de (or to any of the e-mail addresses given below). Workshop webpage: http://ling.uni-konstanz.de/pages/home/dgfs2007/index.htm Deadline for submitting abstracts: August 1st, 2006 Notification of acceptance will be sent by email after September 15th, 2006. For further enquiries please contact: Janet Grijzenhout or Baris Kabak Department of Linguistics University of Konstanz Fach D180 78457 Konstanz, Germany Janet.Grijzenhout uni-konstanz.de Baris.Kabak uni-konstanz.de
Message 2: International Conference on East Asian Linguistics
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Date: 04-Jul-2006
From: Manami Hirayama <manami.hirayama utoronto.ca>
Subject: International Conference on East Asian Linguistics
Full Title: International Conference on East Asian Linguistics
Short Title: ICEAL
Date: 10-Nov-2006 - 12-Nov-2006
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Contact Person: Yoonjung Kang
Meeting Email: < click here to access email >
Web Site: http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/iceal
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics
Subject Language(s): Chinese, Mandarin; Japanese; Korean
Call Deadline: 15-Jul-2006
Meeting Description:
The Department of Linguistics at the University of Toronto is pleased to invite abstracts for submission to the International Conference on East Asian Linguistics to be held at the University of Toronto, November 10-12, 2006. Abstracts are invited for 20 minute presentations (plus 10 minutes for discussion, for a total of 30 minutes) on all aspects of formal linguistics of Chinese, Korean, and/or Japanese. In additional to regular conference sessions, there will be a special session on loanwords. There will be an award of a modest sum for the best student abstract. Invited Speakers: Keynote speakers: San Duanmu (University of Michigan) Chung-hye Han (Simon Fraser University) C.-T. James Huang (Harvard University) Michael Kenstowicz (MIT) Mamoru Saito (Nanzan University) Jen Smith (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) John Whitman (Cornell University) Student speaker: Shigeto Kawahara (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
Abstracts are not to exceed one page in letter-size (8.5'' x 11'') paper with 1'' margins on all sides and 12pt font size, with an optional additional page for data and references. The abstract should have a clear title but should not identify the author(s). The abstract must be sent to iceal chass.utoronto.ca in .pdf format. The name of the .pdf file should be the last name of the (first) author (e.g., Johnson.pdf, not abstract.pdf). Authors may submit a maximum of two abstracts - one as sole author and one as a co-author. Please include the following information in the body of the email: 1. title of paper 2. language(s) to be discussed (Chinese, Japanese, and/or Korean) 3. area of linguistics (e.g., syntax, phonology?) 4. name of the author(s) 5. affiliation 6. e-mail address 7. student (yes/no) Submission deadline: July 15, 2006 Notification of acceptance: September 1, 2006 Additional information for the conference will be made available at the conference website, http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/iceal.
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