LINGUIST List 26.953
Mon Feb 16 2015
Calls: General Linguistics/USA
Editor for this issue: Anna White <awhitelinguistlist.org>
Date: 13-Feb-2015
From: Danielle Burgess <dlb357
cornell.edu>
Subject: Cornell Undergraduate Linguistics Colloquium
E-mail this message to a friend Full Title: Cornell Undergraduate Linguistics Colloquium
Short Title: CULC
Date: 18-Apr-2015 - 19-Apr-2015
Location: Ithaca, NY, USA
Contact Person: Danielle Burgess
Meeting Email:
< click here to access email > Web Site:
http://linguistics.cornell.edu/undergraduate/undergrad-colloquium.cfm
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics
Call Deadline: 11-Mar-2015
Meeting Description:
Cornell University's undergraduate linguistics association, UnderLings, presents its ninth annual undergraduate research colloquium. The goal of the conference is to promote undergraduate research at all levels by facilitating communication and discussion between researchers.
This year's keynote speakers will be Rob Podesva (Stanford University) and Miloje Despic (Cornell University).
Call for Papers:
The UnderLings, the Cornell University Undergraduate Linguistics Association, requests abstract submissions for the 9th annual Cornell Undergraduate Linguistics Colloquium.
The Colloquium will take place April 18-19, 2015.
Student submissions at all levels are encouraged in a variety of subfields of linguistics, including but not limited to phonetics, phonology, syntax, historical linguistics, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, and language acquisition. Applicants pursuing a B.A., B.S., or equivalent degree are invited to submit a one-page abstract for a talk of no more than twenty minutes in length or for a poster presentation at our poster session.
Abstracts should be submitted to culc2015
gmail.com by March 11. Please indicate whether you would like to be considered for a talk or for the poster session or both. There is a probability that the conference proceedings will be published afterward, most likely in an online, widely-accessible format.
Information about the Colloquium may be found at the following website:
http://conf.ling.cornell.edu/culc9/index.html
Page Updated: 16-Feb-2015