Date: 31-Mar-2010
From: Working Papers <working-papers babel.ling.upenn.edu>
Subject: The University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (PWPL) Vol 16, No 1 (2010)
E-mail this message to a friend
Publisher: Penn Linguistics Club
http://www.ling.upenn.edu/papers/pwpl.html
Journal Title: University of Pennyslvania Working Papers in Linguistics
Volume Number: 16
Issue Number: 1
Issue Date: 2010
Subtitle: Proceedings of PLC 33
Main Text:
Penn Working Papers in Linguistics 16.1 Proceedings from the 33rd Annual Penn Linguistics Colloquium Now online, available at: http://repository.upenn.edu/pwpl/vol16/iss1/ Contents: Preface Jon Scott Stevens Puzzles of Russian Subjunctives Andrei Antonenko On the Categorial Status of French à/de ce que J. Marc Authier and Lisa A. Reed Mandarin 'even', `all' and the Trigger of Focus Movement Noah Constant and Chloe C. Gu Indefiniteness in Counting Luka Crnic Clearing up the `Facts' on Complementation Carlos de Cuba and Barbara Urogdi Examining the `Noun Bias': A Structural Approach Rajdip Dhillon The Temporal Indeterminacy of Nasal Gestures in Karitiana Caleb Everett The Licensing of Pronominal Features in WCO and OPC Configurations Michelangelo Falco Comparing Incomparable Frameworks: A Model Theoretic Approach to Phonology Thomas Graf Alienable-Inalienable Asymmetry in Japanese and Korean Possession Tomoko Ishizuka Korean Honorific Agreement too Guides Null Argument Resolution: Evidence from an Offline Study Lucy K. Kim Passives in first language acquisition: What causes the delay? Susannah Kirby Explaining a Restriction on the Scope of the Comparative Operator Daniel Lassiter Refining Salience and the Position of Antecedent Hypothesis: a Study of Catalan Pronouns Laia Mayol A Reassessment of Anti-Homophony in Bulgarian Jean-Francois Mondon Japanese Multiple Nominative Constructions: The View of Antisymmetry Miho Nagai Japanese Left Node Raising as ATB-scrambling Chizuru Nakao Phonological Derivation by Phase: Evidence from Basque Bridget Samuels Vocatives: A Note on Addressee-Management Gerhard Schaden Variation in Loan phonology: Neutralization of Spanish Bilabials in Copala Triqui Ruth Scipione The Perception of Complex Onsets in English: Universal Markedness? Mieko Sperbeck and Winifred Strange Too-many-solutions and Reference to Position in Serial OT Peter Staroverov Processing scalar implicature: What can individual differences tell us? Erin Tavano and Elsi Kaiser Marshallese Passives: Evidence for Two Types of "By Phrases" Heather Willson Implications of Affix-Protecting Junctural Underapplication Matthew Wolf Reconstructing the A/A-bar Distinction in Reconstruction Susi Wurmbrand Concealed Questions from a Cross-linguistic Perspective Zhiguo Xie Non-Reciprocal Pluraction with -Aw in Japanese: Context Dependent Pluralization of Individuals and Events Masahiro Yamada
Linguistic Field(s):
Phonology
Semantics
Syntax
General Linguistics
Language Acquisition
Subject Language(s): Bulgarian (bul)
Chinese, Mandarin (cmn)
Catalan-Valencian-Balear (cat)
French (fra)
Japanese (jpn)
Korean (kor)
Russian (rus)
Spanish (spa)
This Year the LINGUIST List hopes to raise $65,000. This money will go to help
keep the List running by supporting all of our Student Editors for the coming year.
See below for donation instructions, and don't forget to check out our Space Fund
Drive 2010 and join us for a great journey!
http://linguistlist.org/fund-drive/2010/
There are many ways to donate to LINGUIST!
You can donate right now using our secure credit card form at
https://linguistlist.org/donation/donate/donate1.cfm
Alternatively you can also pledge right now and pay later. To do so, go to:
https://linguistlist.org/donation/pledge/pledge1.cfm
For all information on donating and pledging, including information on how to
donate by check, money order, or wire transfer, please visit:
http://linguistlist.org/donation/
The LINGUIST List is under the umbrella of Eastern Michigan University and as
such can receive donations through the EMU Foundation, which is a registered
501(c) Non Profit organization. Our Federal Tax number is 38-6005986. These
donations can be offset against your federal and sometimes your state tax return
(U.S. tax payers only). For more information visit the IRS Web-Site, or contact
your financial advisor.
Many companies also offer a gift matching program, such that they will match
any gift you make to a non-profit organization. Normally this entails your
contacting your human resources department and sending us a form that the
EMU Foundation fills in and returns to your employer. This is generally a simple
administrative procedure that doubles the value of your gift to LINGUIST, without
costing you an extra penny. Please take a moment to check if your company
operates such a program.
Thank you very much for your support of LINGUIST!
Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issue
|