LINGUIST List 19.1192

Tue Apr 08 2008

TOC: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics 28/1 (2008)

Editor for this issue: Fatemeh Abdollahi <fatemehlinguistlist.org>


        1.    Bridget Jankowski, Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics Vol 28, No 1 (2008)


Message 1: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics Vol 28, No 1 (2008)
Date: 08-Apr-2008
From: Bridget Jankowski <http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~twpl/contact.htm>
Subject: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics Vol 28, No 1 (2008)
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Publisher: Linguistics Graduate Course Union, University of Toronto
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~twpl/

Journal Title: Toronto Working Papers in Linguistics Volume Number: 28 Issue Number: 1 Issue Date: 2008


Subtitle: Proceedings of the International Conference on East Asian Linguistics


Main Text:

1. Revisiting Yantai tone sandhiTsung-ying Chen, National Chung Cheng University

2. Obligatory XP-raising in ChineseLawrence Y.L. Cheung, University of California, Los Angeles

3. A two-accent model of Japanese word prosodySan Duanmu, University of Michigan

4. The phonetic boundary between monophthongs and diphthongs in Suzhou ChineseLing Feng, City University of Hong Kong

5. The VP spell-out domains and scope rigiditySeungwan Ha, Boston University

6. An experimental investigation into the placement of the verb in Japanese andKoreanChung-hye Han, Simon Fraser University

7. Alleged small clauses in JapaneseMichiya Kawai, Huron University College and University of Western Ontario

8. A note on contrasts, mergers, and acquisitions in Kyungsang accentMichael Kenstowicz, Massachusetts Institute TechnologyHyesun Cho, Massachusetts Institute TechnologyJieun Kim, University of California, Los Angeles

9. Why [h] and aspirated consonants are different in KoreanLan Kim and John Alderete, Simon Fraser University

10. Revisiting the Relevancy Condition on internally headed relatives in KoreanMin-Joo Kim, Texas Tech University

11. Phonology and phonetics of loanword adaptation: Russian place names inJapanese and KoreanAlexei Kochetov, University of Toronto

12. A mismatch between position and interpretation: focus association with JapaneseSachie Kotani, University of Delaware

13. Negation, focus, and negative concord in JapaneseMasakazu Kuno, Sophia University

14. Two ‘now’s in KoreanEunHee Lee and Jeongmi Choi, University at Buffalo, The State University of NewYork

15. Phonetic variability of /h/ in Korean: aspiration or tensificationSunghwa Lee, University of Victoria

16. A new look at Japanese and Korean scramblingMartha McGinnis, University of Calgary

17. Loan word syntax: a case in the light verb constructionTakashi Nakajima, Toyama Prefectural University

18. Plural marking in classifier languages: a case study of the so-called pluralmarking -tul in KoreanSo-Young Park, University of Southern California

19. N'-ellipsis and the structure of noun phrases in Chinese and JapaneseMamoru Saito, Nanzan UniversityT.-H. Jonah Lin, National Tsing Hua UniversityKeiko Murasugi, Nanzan University

20. Sluicing and the base-generation positions of wh-phrases in MandarinLi-jen Shih, Michigan State University

21. Japanese wh-doublets and metalinguistic variablesYasutada Sudo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

22. Plurality in Chinese with a restricted class of noun-classifier wordsMarie-Thérèse Vinet and Xiaoyan Liu, Université de Sherbrooke

23. Prosody and the syntax of shika -NPIs in Tokyo Japanese and its implicationsfor the theory of grammarHideaki Yamashita, Yokohama National University

24. “Voicing”-tone interaction in Xiangxiang ChineseTing Zeng, City University of Hong Kong

25. Chinese -men and associative pluralsXiaofei Zhang, Michigan State University


Linguistic Field(s): Phonology                             Syntax                             General Linguistics                             Phonetics


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