Editor for this issue: Ann Dizdar <dizdar
tam2000.tamu.edu>
The Sixth Annual Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference August 8-10, 1995 University of Hawaii at Manoa Center for Korean Studies Auditorium Cosponsored by the University of Hawaii s Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures, Department of Linguistics, and Center for Korean Studies Supported by The Korea Foundation ------------------------------- PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM [NOTE: Moderators/discussants to be announced later.] Send inquiries to Professor John Haing (haigMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issueuhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu) Tuesday, August 8 8:00 A.M.-8:45 A.M.: REGISTRATION 8:45 A.M.-9:00 A.M.: WELCOMING REMARKS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS SESSION 1: PHONOLOGY A 9:00-10:30: Aspiration in Korean Phonology Mira Oh, Yeojoo Technical College Korean Place & Manner Assimilations in Optimality Theory Hyeonkwan Cho, University of Minnesota Constraints in Post-obstruent Tensification in Korean Seok-Chae Rhee, University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign 10:30-10:45 A.M. Break SESSION 2: DISCOURSE A 10:45-12:45: Discourse-pragmatic Functions of Sentence- initial and Sentence-final Uses of the Quotative Particle in Japanese Makoto Hayashi, University of Colorado at Boulder An Expanded Concept of Speakerhood in Japanese Discourse Dina R. Yoshimi, University of Hawaii at Manoa Japanese kedo: Discourse Function and Genre Toshihide Nakayama and Kumiko Ichihashi- Nakayama, University of California at Santa Barbara How Seeing Approaches Knowing in Korean, Japanese, and English: An analysis of pota, miru, and see Yong Yae Park and Susan Strauss University of California at Los Angeles 12:45-2:00 Lunch 2:00-3:00: GUEST SPEAKER Un-Altaic Features of the Korean Verb Samuel E. Martin, Yale University 3:00-3:15: Break SESSION 3: HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS A 3:15-5:45: On the origins of Japanese Sentence Particles ka and zo Charles J. Quinn, Jr., Ohio State University The Functions of kakari Particle namu in Heian Narratives: An Example from the Tale of Genji J. Paul Warnick, Ohio State University On the Origin of Accent Register in Proto-Japanese Alexander Vovin, Miami University Word-initial Low Register in Proto-Japanese Moriyo Shimabukuro, University of Hawaii at Manoa Another Source of m-b Variation in Japanese Blaine Erickson, University of Hawaii at Manoa Wednesday, August 9 SESSION 4: SEMANTICS 8:30-11:00: Analysis of Polysemous Verbs Keedong Lee, Yonsei University Verb Lexicalization Patterns in Korean Young-joo Kim, Hong-Ik University On the Primacy of Progressive over Resultative State: The Case of Japanese -teiru Yasuhiro Shirai, University of California at Los Angeles Groups as Event-oriented Entities Eun-Joo Kwak, Brown University Topic, Focus, and Strong Readings in Korean: Information Partition by Phrase Structure and Morphology Hye-Won Choi, Stanford University 11:00-11:15: Break 11:15-12:15: GUEST SPEAKER The Logic of Desirability and Conditional Reasoning Noriko Akatsuka, University of California at Los Angeles 12:15-1:30: Lunch SESSION 5: DISCOURSE B 1:30-3:30: Discourse Determiners of Referential Choice in Korean Acquisition Patricia M. Clancy, University of California at Santa Barbara An Inquiry into the Discourse Managing Function of a Japanese Particle WA: An Analysis of Two Distinctive Interpretations of the TE-WA Construction in Japanese Setsuko Arita, Kyushu University A Cognitive Account of the Korean Morpheme -se: A Marker of Semantic Givenness Susan Strauss, University of California at Los Angeles The Discourse Functions of -myen Clause in Korean Chang-Bong Lee, University of Pennsylvania 3:30-3:45: Break SESSION 6: SYNTAX A 3:45-5:45: Case-theoretic Account of Complementizer Deletion Hirotaka Mitomo, Yokohama National University Tense in the Subject Raising Construction Kaoru Ohta, University of Washington Identifying the Antecedent of pro in Korean and Japanese Young-Suk Lee and Lizanne Kaiser, Yale University Two Types of Synthetic Compounds and Move- Affix in Korean Chung-Kon Shi, Harvard University 6:30-9:00: Dinner Reception (location to be announced) Thursday, August 10 SESSION 7: HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS B 8:30-10:00: Kakarimusubi from a Comparative Perspective John Whitman, Cornell University Evidence for Pre- or Proto-historic Loans into Japanese from a Related Language of the Korean Peninsula Leon A. Serafim, University of Hawaii at Manoa Early Chinese Loanwords in Korean and Japanese: Reexamining an Old Problem from a Modern Perspective Marc H. Miyake, University of Hawaii at Manoa 10:10-10:15: Break SESSION 8: SYNTAX B 10:15-12:15: Numeral Classifiers as Adverbs of Quantification Yukiko Sasaki Alam, Texas A & M University Opacity and Subjunctive Complements in Japanese Asako Uchibori, University of Connecticut NPIs Outside of Negation Scope Daeho Chung and Hong-keun Park University of Southern California Asymmetry in the Quantificational Force of -(n)un in Korean Chung-hye Han, University of Pennsylvania 12:15-1:30: Lunch SESSION 9: SYNTAX C 1:30-3:00: Argument Prominence of Sino-Korean Verbal Nouns Yunsun Jung, Harvard University Argument Structure Change in Benefactive Construction in Korean Seok-Hoon You, University of Hawaii at Manoa Light Verb Constructions and Temporal Constructions in Japanese Hiroto Hoshi, SOAS, University of London 3:00-3:15: Break SESSION 10: PHONOLOGY B 3:15-5:15: Perception of Japanese Pitch Accent by Koreans and Its Implications for Understanding Phonological Structures Y. Sukegawa, S. Sato, K. Maekawa, and H. Choi Tohoku University and National Language Research Institute Umlaut in Kyungsang Korean: The Optimal Domains Theoretic Account Seung-Hoon Shin, Indiana University Generalized Alignment and Prosodic Categorization in Korean Hyunsook Kang and Borim Lee Hanyang University and Wonkwang University NN: Rendaku and Licensing Paradox Keiichiro Suzuki, University of Arizona 5:15: CLOSING REMARKS