From nathanwhill at gmail.com Tue Sep 3 08:16:31 2013 From: nathanwhill at gmail.com (Nathan Hill) Date: Tue, 3 Sep 2013 09:16:31 +0100 Subject: Question about Greek contracted futures Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, My understanding of Greek contracted verbs is that they reflect a lost *-s- or *-j- (-j- in contracted presents); so, take a contracted future φανῶ < *φανέσω, right? But then why are most contracted futures in -l or -n stems? (Guess: there is something about the morphology of -l and -n stem presents that means a contracted future will always look different form the present, e.g. the ί in φαίνω, so there is no need to analogically restore the σ as we do for instance in λύσω) I would be very grateful for references to relevant literature. many thanks, Nathan Dr Nathan W. Hill British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Linguistics Lecturer in Tibetan and Linguistics (on leave) Department of China & Inner Asia and Department of Linguistics SOAS, University of London Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG, UK Tel: +44 (0)20 7898 4220 -- Profile -- http://www.soas.ac.uk/staff/staff46254.php Tibetan Studies at SOAS -- http://www.soas.ac.uk/cia/tibetanstudies/ -- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From Hubert.Cuyckens at arts.kuleuven.be Sun Sep 8 12:23:42 2013 From: Hubert.Cuyckens at arts.kuleuven.be (Hubert Cuyckens) Date: Sun, 8 Sep 2013 12:23:42 +0000 Subject: Call for Workshop Proposals at the 18th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics (ICEHL-18) Message-ID: Dear colleagues, This is a short reminder that proposals for workshops at the 18th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics (ICEHL-18), KU Leuven, Belgium, are invited until 30 September 2013. All details can be found at http://www.arts.kuleuven.be/ling/ICEHL18/workshops The deadline for abstracts for papers and posters is November 30. Hubert Cuyckens (on behalf of the Organizing team) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From thawkic551 at rogers.com Mon Sep 23 18:08:33 2013 From: thawkic551 at rogers.com (UTP Journals) Date: Mon, 23 Sep 2013 14:08:33 -0400 Subject: Recent additions to Lexicons of Early Modern English Message-ID: Recently added to Lexicons of Early Modern English - http://leme.library.utoronto.ca/ § Robert Cawdrey, A Table Alphabetical, Containing and Teaching the Understanding of Hard Usual English Words (1617) § Jean de La Quintinie, The Complete Gardener (1693) § Anonymous, The Great Herbal (1526) § Claude Hollyband, A Dictionarie French and English (1593) § Richard Benese, The Manner of Measuring (1537) § Edward Hatton, The Merchant's Magazine Dictionary of Merchandise and Trade (1699) Coming soon to LEME § John Thorie, The Theatre of the Earth (1601) § Richard Head, The English Rogue (1665) § John Rider, Bibliotheca Scholastica(1589) § Latin-English dictionary § Guy Miege, A New Dictionary, French and English (1677) § Sir Thomas Blount, Nomo-Lexikon(1670) § Henry Hexham, A Copious English and Netherdutch Dictionary(1641-42) § Joshua Poole, English Parnassus(1657) Lexicons of Early Modern English is a growing historical database offering scholars unprecedented access to early books and manuscripts documenting the growth and development of the English language. With more than 600,000 word-entries from 184 monolingual, bilingual, and polyglot dictionaries, glossaries, and linguistic treatises, encyclopedic and other lexical works from the beginning of printing in England to 1702, as well as tools updated annually, LEME sets the standard for modern linguistic research on the English language. Use Modern Techniques to Research Early Modern English! 184 searchable lexicons 139 fully analyzed lexicons 618,477 total word entries 398,128 fully analyzed word entries 60,891 total English modern headwords LEME provides exciting opportunities for research for historians of the English language. More than a half-million word-entries devised by contemporary speakers of early modern English describe the meaning of words, and their equivalents in languages such as French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and other tongues encountered then in Europe, America, and Asia. University of Toronto Press Journals 5201 Dufferin St., Toronto, ON, Canada M3H 5T8 Tel: (416) 667-7810 Fax: (416) 667-7881 journals at utpress.utoronto.ca www.utpjournals.com/leme http://leme.library.utoronto.ca/ posted by T Hawkins -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From patrick.honeybone at ed.ac.uk Tue Sep 24 23:24:15 2013 From: patrick.honeybone at ed.ac.uk (Patrick Honeybone) Date: Wed, 25 Sep 2013 00:24:15 +0100 Subject: Final call: Symposium on Historical Phonology, Edinburgh, January 2014 Message-ID: SECOND AND FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS Symposium on Historical Phonology University of Edinburgh, 13–14 January 2014 Deadline for abstracts: 30th September 2013 A symposium to celebrate Historical Phonology and the forthcoming publication of the Oxford Handbook of Historical Phonology. Website: www.lel.ed.ac.uk/symposium-on-historical-phonology ------------------------ BACKGROUND Early 2014 will see the publication of the Oxford Handbook of Historical Phonology. In part to celebrate this, and in part because Historical Phonology is inherently worth celebrating, we are organising a Symposium on Historical Phonology, to be held at the University of Edinburgh on 13th and 14th January 2014. The Handbook aims to gather together perspectives on phonological change and on the reconstruction of past phonological states from across the discipline. The table of contents is available here: http://www.joseph-salmons.net/handbook Contributors to the Handbook have been invited to attend the symposium, and those listed below provisionally intend to attend. The symposium will consist of presentations by some of them, the organisers, and anyone else who would like to attend (see the call for papers below). The intention is for the event to be organised informally but to involve serious discussion of theoretical and practical issues in Historical Phonology. * Ricardo Bermudez-Otero (University of Manchester) * Andras Cser (Pázmány Péter Catholic University) * Patricia J. Donegan (University of Hawai‘i) * B. Elan Dresher (University of Toronto) * David Fertig (University at Buffalo) * Mark Hale (Concordia University) * Patrick Honeybone (University of Edinburgh) * Madelyn Kissock (Concordia University) * Roger Lass (University of Cape Town) * Warren Maguire (University of Edinburgh) * Donka Minkova (UCLA) * Geoffrey S. Nathan (Wayne State University) * Martha Ratliff (Wayne State University) * Joseph Salmons (University of Wisconsin, Madison) * Tobias Scheer (Laboratoire BCL, University of Nice) * Daniel Schreier (University of Zurich) * Laura Catharine Smith (Brigham Young University) * Christian Uffmann (University of Sussex) * Adam Ussishkin (University of Arizona) * Marilyn Vihman (University of York) * Andrew Wedel (University of Arizona) * Malcah Yaeger-Dror (University of Arizona) * Alan C.L. Yu (University of Chicago) ------------------------ CALL FOR PAPERS We would now like to open participation to the symposium to anyone else with an interest in Historical Phonology. The fee for attendance will be minimal. If you would like to present at the symposium, you will need to send in a 250 word abstract explaining what you would like to discuss by 30th September at the very latest. We anticipate that most abstracts will be awarded a poster presentation slot. If more abstracts are received than can be accommodated, abstracts will be selected by the symposium organisers on the basis of the broadness of their relevance, modified by an impetus to ensure that a wide range of perspectives are represented. We welcome abstracts which discuss any aspect of Historical Phonology. Your abstract should be no more than 250 words long and should explain the issues you aim to discuss and any results or conclusions you have. References may be included, and can be ignored for the word-count. As we hope not to have much, if anything, in the way of abstract reviewing, abstracts should be identified, with the title of your presentation and your name at the top. You should send your abstract as a pdf file by midnight on 30th September (GMT/UTC) as an attachment to an email to: patrick.honeybone at ed.ac.uk. Please make sure any phonetic font that you use is embedded in the pdf. Please see the symposium's website for further details: http://www.lel.ed.ac.uk/symposium-on-historical-phonology/ ------------------------ ORGANISERS All those involved in the Handbook have contributed to the symposium in some way. The organisation of the event itself is in the hands of the Handbook's editors: * Patrick Honeybone (University of Edinburgh) * Joseph Salmons (University of Wisconsin, Madison) And of the following: * Rhona Alcorn (University of Edinburgh) * Julian Bradfield (University of Edinburgh) * Josef Fruehwald (University of Edinburgh) * Pavel Iosad (University of Edinburgh) * James Kirby (University of Edinburgh) * Warren Maguire (University of Edinburgh) * Michael Ramsammy (University of Edinburgh) -- The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336. _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From nathanwhill at gmail.com Wed Sep 25 14:50:34 2013 From: nathanwhill at gmail.com (Nathan Hill) Date: Wed, 25 Sep 2013 15:50:34 +0100 Subject: two works of Iv=?utf-8?Q?=C3=A1n_F=C3=B3nagy?= Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, I am having trouble getting my hands on two works by Iván Fónagy. I wonder if anyone out there might have access to them. Fónagy, Iván (1956). “Ueber den Verlauf des Lautwandels.” Acta linguistica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 6: 173-278. Fónagy, Iván (1967). Variation und Lautwandel. Monologentagung. Wien. thank you, Nathan Dr Nathan W. Hill British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Linguistics Lecturer in Tibetan and Linguistics (on leave) Department of China & Inner Asia and Department of Linguistics SOAS, University of London Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG, UK Tel: +44 (0)20 7898 4220 -- Profile -- http://www.soas.ac.uk/staff/staff46254.php Tibetan Studies at SOAS -- http://www.soas.ac.uk/cia/tibetanstudies/ -- _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From mithun at linguistics.ucsb.edu Sun Sep 29 23:32:42 2013 From: mithun at linguistics.ucsb.edu (Marianne Mithun) Date: Sun, 29 Sep 2013 16:32:42 -0700 Subject: Job announcement Santa Barbara Message-ID: The Linguistics Department of the University of California, Santa Barbara seeks to hire a linguist specializing in typologically-informed field linguistics. For primary consideration, submit materials by November 12, 2013. The appointment will be a tenure-track position at the Assistant Professor level, effective July 1, 2014. Candidates must have expertise in the analysis of linguistic structure, a theoretical specialization in one or more subfields of linguistics, experience in language documentation and description, and research experience with one or more languages or language families. We are especially interested in candidates with expertise in technical fieldwork methodologies, work with lesser-known languages, and/or an understanding of the roles of diachrony and contact in shaping language. The ideal candidate will have the potential to link the theoretical implications of his or her research to other sub-disciplines in linguistics, and to interact with colleagues and students across disciplinary boundaries at UCSB. The ability to engage with the departmental focus on functional and usage-based approaches to linguistic explanation is essential. Candidates must have demonstrated excellence in teaching and will be expected to teach a range of graduate and undergraduate courses in general linguistics and field linguistics, including a year-long graduate field methods sequence. The Ph.D. in linguistics or a related field is required. The degree is normally required by the time of appointment. The position will remain open until filled. Please submit all materials via the online UC Recruit System at: https://recruit.ap.ucsb.edu/apply/JPF00205 No paper applications please. Inquiries may be addressed to the Search Committee at search-linguistics at linguistics.ucsb.edu. Interviews will be conducted either in person at the Linguistic Society of America annual meeting (January 2-5, 2014) or via Skype video conferencing; the two formats will be given equivalent consideration. Our department has a genuine commitment to diversity and is especially interested in candidates who can contribute to the diversity and excellence of the academic community through research, teaching and service. UCSB is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employ _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From nathanwhill at gmail.com Tue Sep 3 08:16:31 2013 From: nathanwhill at gmail.com (Nathan Hill) Date: Tue, 3 Sep 2013 09:16:31 +0100 Subject: Question about Greek contracted futures Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, My understanding of Greek contracted verbs is that they reflect a lost *-s- or *-j- (-j- in contracted presents); so, take a contracted future ???? < *??????, right? But then why are most contracted futures in -l or -n stems? (Guess: there is something about the morphology of -l and -n stem presents that means a contracted future will always look different form the present, e.g. the ? in ?????, so there is no need to analogically restore the ? as we do for instance in ????) I would be very grateful for references to relevant literature. many thanks, Nathan Dr Nathan W. Hill British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Linguistics Lecturer in Tibetan and Linguistics (on leave) Department of China & Inner Asia and Department of Linguistics SOAS, University of London Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG, UK Tel: +44 (0)20 7898 4220 -- Profile -- http://www.soas.ac.uk/staff/staff46254.php Tibetan Studies at SOAS -- http://www.soas.ac.uk/cia/tibetanstudies/ -- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From Hubert.Cuyckens at arts.kuleuven.be Sun Sep 8 12:23:42 2013 From: Hubert.Cuyckens at arts.kuleuven.be (Hubert Cuyckens) Date: Sun, 8 Sep 2013 12:23:42 +0000 Subject: Call for Workshop Proposals at the 18th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics (ICEHL-18) Message-ID: Dear colleagues, This is a short reminder that proposals for workshops at the 18th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics (ICEHL-18), KU Leuven, Belgium, are invited until 30 September 2013. All details can be found at http://www.arts.kuleuven.be/ling/ICEHL18/workshops The deadline for abstracts for papers and posters is November 30. Hubert Cuyckens (on behalf of the Organizing team) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From thawkic551 at rogers.com Mon Sep 23 18:08:33 2013 From: thawkic551 at rogers.com (UTP Journals) Date: Mon, 23 Sep 2013 14:08:33 -0400 Subject: Recent additions to Lexicons of Early Modern English Message-ID: Recently added to Lexicons of Early Modern English - http://leme.library.utoronto.ca/ ? Robert Cawdrey, A Table Alphabetical, Containing and Teaching the Understanding of Hard Usual English Words (1617) ? Jean de La Quintinie, The Complete Gardener (1693) ? Anonymous, The Great Herbal (1526) ? Claude Hollyband, A Dictionarie French and English (1593) ? Richard Benese, The Manner of Measuring (1537) ? Edward Hatton, The Merchant's Magazine Dictionary of Merchandise and Trade (1699) Coming soon to LEME ? John Thorie, The Theatre of the Earth (1601) ? Richard Head, The English Rogue (1665) ? John Rider, Bibliotheca Scholastica(1589) ? Latin-English dictionary ? Guy Miege, A New Dictionary, French and English (1677) ? Sir Thomas Blount, Nomo-Lexikon(1670) ? Henry Hexham, A Copious English and Netherdutch Dictionary(1641-42) ? Joshua Poole, English Parnassus(1657) Lexicons of Early Modern English is a growing historical database offering scholars unprecedented access to early books and manuscripts documenting the growth and development of the English language. With more than 600,000 word-entries from 184 monolingual, bilingual, and polyglot dictionaries, glossaries, and linguistic treatises, encyclopedic and other lexical works from the beginning of printing in England to 1702, as well as tools updated annually, LEME sets the standard for modern linguistic research on the English language. Use Modern Techniques to Research Early Modern English! 184 searchable lexicons 139 fully analyzed lexicons 618,477 total word entries 398,128 fully analyzed word entries 60,891 total English modern headwords LEME provides exciting opportunities for research for historians of the English language. More than a half-million word-entries devised by contemporary speakers of early modern English describe the meaning of words, and their equivalents in languages such as French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and other tongues encountered then in Europe, America, and Asia. University of Toronto Press Journals 5201 Dufferin St., Toronto, ON, Canada M3H 5T8 Tel: (416) 667-7810 Fax: (416) 667-7881 journals at utpress.utoronto.ca www.utpjournals.com/leme http://leme.library.utoronto.ca/ posted by T Hawkins -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From patrick.honeybone at ed.ac.uk Tue Sep 24 23:24:15 2013 From: patrick.honeybone at ed.ac.uk (Patrick Honeybone) Date: Wed, 25 Sep 2013 00:24:15 +0100 Subject: Final call: Symposium on Historical Phonology, Edinburgh, January 2014 Message-ID: SECOND AND FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS Symposium on Historical Phonology University of Edinburgh, 13?14 January 2014 Deadline for abstracts: 30th September 2013 A symposium to celebrate Historical Phonology and the forthcoming publication of the Oxford Handbook of Historical Phonology. Website: www.lel.ed.ac.uk/symposium-on-historical-phonology ------------------------ BACKGROUND Early 2014 will see the publication of the Oxford Handbook of Historical Phonology. In part to celebrate this, and in part because Historical Phonology is inherently worth celebrating, we are organising a Symposium on Historical Phonology, to be held at the University of Edinburgh on 13th and 14th January 2014. The Handbook aims to gather together perspectives on phonological change and on the reconstruction of past phonological states from across the discipline. The table of contents is available here: http://www.joseph-salmons.net/handbook Contributors to the Handbook have been invited to attend the symposium, and those listed below provisionally intend to attend. The symposium will consist of presentations by some of them, the organisers, and anyone else who would like to attend (see the call for papers below). The intention is for the event to be organised informally but to involve serious discussion of theoretical and practical issues in Historical Phonology. * Ricardo Bermudez-Otero (University of Manchester) * Andras Cser (Pázmány Péter Catholic University) * Patricia J. Donegan (University of Hawai?i) * B. Elan Dresher (University of Toronto) * David Fertig (University at Buffalo) * Mark Hale (Concordia University) * Patrick Honeybone (University of Edinburgh) * Madelyn Kissock (Concordia University) * Roger Lass (University of Cape Town) * Warren Maguire (University of Edinburgh) * Donka Minkova (UCLA) * Geoffrey S. Nathan (Wayne State University) * Martha Ratliff (Wayne State University) * Joseph Salmons (University of Wisconsin, Madison) * Tobias Scheer (Laboratoire BCL, University of Nice) * Daniel Schreier (University of Zurich) * Laura Catharine Smith (Brigham Young University) * Christian Uffmann (University of Sussex) * Adam Ussishkin (University of Arizona) * Marilyn Vihman (University of York) * Andrew Wedel (University of Arizona) * Malcah Yaeger-Dror (University of Arizona) * Alan C.L. Yu (University of Chicago) ------------------------ CALL FOR PAPERS We would now like to open participation to the symposium to anyone else with an interest in Historical Phonology. The fee for attendance will be minimal. If you would like to present at the symposium, you will need to send in a 250 word abstract explaining what you would like to discuss by 30th September at the very latest. We anticipate that most abstracts will be awarded a poster presentation slot. If more abstracts are received than can be accommodated, abstracts will be selected by the symposium organisers on the basis of the broadness of their relevance, modified by an impetus to ensure that a wide range of perspectives are represented. We welcome abstracts which discuss any aspect of Historical Phonology. Your abstract should be no more than 250 words long and should explain the issues you aim to discuss and any results or conclusions you have. References may be included, and can be ignored for the word-count. As we hope not to have much, if anything, in the way of abstract reviewing, abstracts should be identified, with the title of your presentation and your name at the top. You should send your abstract as a pdf file by midnight on 30th September (GMT/UTC) as an attachment to an email to: patrick.honeybone at ed.ac.uk. Please make sure any phonetic font that you use is embedded in the pdf. Please see the symposium's website for further details: http://www.lel.ed.ac.uk/symposium-on-historical-phonology/ ------------------------ ORGANISERS All those involved in the Handbook have contributed to the symposium in some way. The organisation of the event itself is in the hands of the Handbook's editors: * Patrick Honeybone (University of Edinburgh) * Joseph Salmons (University of Wisconsin, Madison) And of the following: * Rhona Alcorn (University of Edinburgh) * Julian Bradfield (University of Edinburgh) * Josef Fruehwald (University of Edinburgh) * Pavel Iosad (University of Edinburgh) * James Kirby (University of Edinburgh) * Warren Maguire (University of Edinburgh) * Michael Ramsammy (University of Edinburgh) -- The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336. _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From nathanwhill at gmail.com Wed Sep 25 14:50:34 2013 From: nathanwhill at gmail.com (Nathan Hill) Date: Wed, 25 Sep 2013 15:50:34 +0100 Subject: two works of Iv=?utf-8?Q?=C3=A1n_F=C3=B3nagy?= Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, I am having trouble getting my hands on two works by Iv?n F?nagy. I wonder if anyone out there might have access to them. F?nagy, Iv?n (1956). ?Ueber den Verlauf des Lautwandels.? Acta linguistica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 6: 173-278. F?nagy, Iv?n (1967). Variation und Lautwandel. Monologentagung. Wien. thank you, Nathan Dr Nathan W. Hill British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Linguistics Lecturer in Tibetan and Linguistics (on leave) Department of China & Inner Asia and Department of Linguistics SOAS, University of London Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG, UK Tel: +44 (0)20 7898 4220 -- Profile -- http://www.soas.ac.uk/staff/staff46254.php Tibetan Studies at SOAS -- http://www.soas.ac.uk/cia/tibetanstudies/ -- _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l From mithun at linguistics.ucsb.edu Sun Sep 29 23:32:42 2013 From: mithun at linguistics.ucsb.edu (Marianne Mithun) Date: Sun, 29 Sep 2013 16:32:42 -0700 Subject: Job announcement Santa Barbara Message-ID: The Linguistics Department of the University of California, Santa Barbara seeks to hire a linguist specializing in typologically-informed field linguistics. For primary consideration, submit materials by November 12, 2013. The appointment will be a tenure-track position at the Assistant Professor level, effective July 1, 2014. Candidates must have expertise in the analysis of linguistic structure, a theoretical specialization in one or more subfields of linguistics, experience in language documentation and description, and research experience with one or more languages or language families. We are especially interested in candidates with expertise in technical fieldwork methodologies, work with lesser-known languages, and/or an understanding of the roles of diachrony and contact in shaping language. The ideal candidate will have the potential to link the theoretical implications of his or her research to other sub-disciplines in linguistics, and to interact with colleagues and students across disciplinary boundaries at UCSB. The ability to engage with the departmental focus on functional and usage-based approaches to linguistic explanation is essential. Candidates must have demonstrated excellence in teaching and will be expected to teach a range of graduate and undergraduate courses in general linguistics and field linguistics, including a year-long graduate field methods sequence. The Ph.D. in linguistics or a related field is required. The degree is normally required by the time of appointment. The position will remain open until filled. Please submit all materials via the online UC Recruit System at: https://recruit.ap.ucsb.edu/apply/JPF00205 No paper applications please. Inquiries may be addressed to the Search Committee at search-linguistics at linguistics.ucsb.edu. Interviews will be conducted either in person at the Linguistic Society of America annual meeting (January 2-5, 2014) or via Skype video conferencing; the two formats will be given equivalent consideration. Our department has a genuine commitment to diversity and is especially interested in candidates who can contribute to the diversity and excellence of the academic community through research, teaching and service. UCSB is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employ _______________________________________________ Histling-l mailing list Histling-l at mailman.rice.edu https://mailman.rice.edu/mailman/listinfo/histling-l