7.914, Confs: Perspectives on Negation, Generative grammar (SICOGG96)

The Linguist List linguist at tam2000.tamu.edu
Thu Jun 20 20:01:01 UTC 1996


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LINGUIST List:  Vol-7-914. Thu Jun 20 1996. ISSN: 1068-4875. Lines:  535
 
Subject: 7.914, Confs: Perspectives on Negation, Generative grammar (SICOGG96)
 
Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
            Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at emunix.emich.edu> (On Leave)
            T. Daniel Seely: Eastern Michigan U. <dseely at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Associate Editor:  Ljuba Veselinova <lveselin at emunix.emich.edu>
Assistant Editors: Ron Reck <rreck at emunix.emich.edu>
                   Ann Dizdar <dizdar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
                   Annemarie Valdez <avaldez at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Software development: John H. Remmers <remmers at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Editor for this issue: dizdar at tam2000.tamu.edu (Ann Dizdar)
 
We'd appreciate your limiting conference announcements to 150 lines,
so that we can post more than 1 per issue.  Please consider omitting
information useful only to attendees, such as information on housing,
transportation, or rooms and times of sessions.  Please do not use
abbreviations or acronyms for your conference unless you explain
them in your text.  Many people outside your area of specialization
will not recognize them.   Thank you for your cooperation.
 
---------------------------------Directory-----------------------------------
1)
Date:  Thu, 20 Jun 1996 09:07:21 +0200
From:  hoeksema at let.rug.nl (Jacob Hoeksema)
Subject:  conference program
 
2)
Date:  Wed, 19 Jun 1996 10:28:40 PDT
From:  swkim at daisy.kwangwoon.ac.kr (Sun-Woong Kim)
Subject:  SICOGG96
 
---------------------------------Messages------------------------------------
1)
Date:  Thu, 20 Jun 1996 09:07:21 +0200
From:  hoeksema at let.rug.nl (Jacob Hoeksema)
Subject:  conference program
 
 
The following is the program for the conference `Perspectives on
Negation,' to be held at the University of Groningen, in the
Toneelzaal of the Harmonie-building, Oude Kijk in 't Jatstraat 26,
Groningen. Further information on lodging etc. can be found at our
website:
 
http://www.let.rug.nl/Linguistics/Hoeksema/negconf.html
 
(Please mind the upper and lower case letters!)
 
                         "PERSPECTIVES ON NEGATION"
                                August 24-26
                   University of Groningen, The Netherlands
 
PRELIMINARY PROGRAM
Saturday, August 24
 9:00- 9:30    Registration and coffee
 9:30-10:30    Laurence R. Horn (invited speaker): Pick a
               theory (not just ANY theory): Indiscriminatives
               and the Free-Choice Indefinite
10:30-11:00    Anita Mittwoch: Perfective Sentences under
               Negation and Durative Adverbials
11:00-11:30    Coffee
11:30-12:00    Henny Klein: Polarity Sensitivity and
               Collocational Restrictions of Adverbs of Degree
12:00-12:30    Christopher Kennedy: On the Monotonicity of
               Polar Adjectives
12:30-14:00    Lunch
14:00-14:30    Pierre Larrivee: A Semantic Definition of NPIs,
               with Evidence from English and French
14:30-15:00    Anastasia Giannakidou: Semantic Licensing
               Dependencies in Greek
15:00-15:30    Tea
15:30-16:00    Cecile Meier: Licensing NPIs in Because-Clauses
16:00-16:30    Arie Verhagen: The Pragmatics of Let Alone
16:30-17:30    Jay David Atlas (invited speaker): A Typology
               of Negative Quantifier Noun Phrases (or, What
               did they mean, `Don't be so negative!'?)
 
Sunday, August 25
 9:00-10:00    William A. Ladusaw (invited speaker): What Does The
               Theory of Indefinites do for the Theory of NPIs?
10:00-10:30    Utpal Lahiri: Even-incorporated NPIs in Hindi
10:30-11:00    Hotze Rullmann: Focus Particles, Polarity, and Scope
11:00-11:30    Coffee
11:30-12:00    Ton van der Wouden: Negative Polarity Auxiliaries
12:00-12:30    Johan van der Auwera: Negative Modals, in
               Europe
12:30-14:00    Lunch
14:00-14:30    Kenneth F. Drozd: Reflections of Semantic
               Competence in Child Language Discourse Negation
14:30-15:00    Charlotte Koster and Sjoukje van der Wal: A
               Multidisciplinary Approach to Negative Polarity
15:00-15:30    Tea
15:30-16:00    Alison Henry, Rose MacLaren, Cathy Finlay, and
               John Wilson: The Acquisition of Negative
               Concord in Non-standard English
16:00-17:00    Frans Zwarts (invited speaker): TBA
 
Monday, August 26
 9:00-10:00    Raffaella Zanuttini and Paul Portner (invited
               speakers): The Force of Negation in
               Exclamatives and Interrogatives
10:00-10:30    Hugues M. Peters: An Alternative Proposal for
               French Negation
10:30-11:00    Patrick A. Schindler: A Uniform Approach to the
               Licensing of Negative Polarity
11:00-11:30    Coffee
11:30-12:00    Gertjan Postma: Configurationality and Negative
               Polarity: The story of ooit continued
12:00-12:30    Elena Herburger: On the Interpretation of
               Spanish `N-words'
12:30-14:00    Lunch
14:00-14:30    Jack Hoeksema: C-command, Scope and the
               Triggering of Polarity Items
14:30-15:00    L.M. Tovena: Neg-raising: Negation as Failure?
15:00-15:30    Tea
15:30-16:00    Sebastian Loebner: Negation, Predication, and
               Quantification
16:00-17:00    Johan van Benthem (invited speaker): TBA
 
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
Perspectives on Negation
 
Registration Form
 
The preregistration fee for the conference is Dfl 50 (including dinner
party on Sunday night), or Dfl 25 (without dinner). On site
registration will be Dfl 60 (with dinner) or Dfl 35 (without dinner).
 
Because of the complexities of international monetary transactions, we
request that even those who preregister pay their conference fee in
cash at the start of the conference. Please do not send us checks or
money orders.
 
For preregistration, please fill out the form below, and return it to
the following address BEFORE AUGUST 1:
 
          `Pionier'-Conference "Perspectives on Negation"
          c/o Jack Hoeksema
          Department of Dutch
          University of Groningen
          PO Box 716
          7900 AS  Groningen
          The Netherlands
 
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
Name:
Affiliation:
Address:
 
 
Phone:
Fax:
E-mail:
 
          Please check one:
          ___  Preregistration with dinner  (Dfl 50)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2)
Date:  Wed, 19 Jun 1996 10:28:40 PDT
From:  swkim at daisy.kwangwoon.ac.kr (Sun-Woong Kim)
Subject:  SICOGG96
 
 
The Korean Generative Grammar Circle
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
c/o Prof. Hee-Don Ahn   Phone: +822-450-3338(O), 459-7666(H),
 201-8419(Fax)
Dept. of English, Konkuk University, Seoul 143-701, Korea Email:
 hdahn at kkucc.konkuk.ac.kr
 
 June 1, 1996
 
        1996 SEOUL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GENERATIVE GRAMMAR
                                IN COMMEMORATION OF
           THE 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF SOOKMYUNG WOMEN'S UNIVERSITY
                                       July 1-6, 1996
         Main Building, Sookmyung Women's University, Seoul, Korea
 
Dear Colleague,
We are sorry that we have not been able to send you earlier the full
information for SICOGG 96. This is our final circular before the
Conference starts on July 1, 1996.
 
1.ACCOMMODATION
   During the conference, for the 7 nights June 30 July 6,
participants who need accommodation will be urged to stay at Hoam
Faculty House, just next to Seoul National University. This is the
place where all invited speakers will stay, too. Since only a limited
number of rooms could be reserved, please let us know (by Email or Fax
if available) how many nights do you want to stay there, as soon as
you can. We will reserve the rooms for you. Meals including Breakfast
can be purchased at the cafeteria/restaurant inside the central
building. Rooms now available are all airconditioned and Korean
Ondol-style. Hoam Faculty House is about one hour drive from Kimpo
International Airport, and a 30 minute drive to Conference site,
Sookmyung Women's University under normal traffic conditions. The
information for convenient transportations from the accommodation
place to conference site, including the city map, will be available at
the front desk upon your arrival. Followings are the current discount
rates for Hoam Faculty House.
        Single Room or Double Room          36,000 Won (US$ 45) per night
 
(At most 2 person for one room: $23 for each, if you share the room
with other)
 
Accommodations in Seoul are costly. Beside Hoam Faculty House,
followings are hotels which are close to (or not very far from)
Sookmyung Women's University. For reservations on these hotels, we
leave it to individual participants to make their own arrangements.
Hotel Rainbow: 15 minute walk to SWU (very close to SWU), quality
somewhat worse than Hoam
 Single or Double Room US$ 55-60 (bed or ondol, $30 for each if you
 share)
           Call for reservation: +822-792-9993  6(Phone)   -792-9997(Fax)
 
Hotel Kaya: 15 minute walk to SWU (very close to SWU), quality
somewhat worse than Hoam
Single or Double Room US$ 55-60 (bed or ondol, $30 for each if you
 share)
           Call for reservation: +822-798-5101  10(Phone)   -798-5900(Fax)
Hamilton Hotel: 15 minute drive to SWU, quality somewhat better than
Hoam
 Single or Double Room US$ 110 (bed only, $55 for each if you share)
           Call for reservation: +822-794-0171  9(Phone)   -795-0457(Fax)
Capital Hotel: 15 minute drive to SWU, quality better than Hoam and
Hamilton
 Single or Double Room US$ 210 (bed only, $105 for each if you share)
           Call for reservation: +822-792-1122(Phone)   -796-0918(Fax)
 
In sum, you will save some money and can stay with some comfort if you
choose Hoam Faculty House. Hotel Rainbow and Kaya have advantages in
that they are very close to the conference site, i.e. walking distance
to SWU.  Hamilton and Capital Hotel, on the other hand, are in better
quality, but they are relatively expensive.
 
2.CLIMATE AND CLOTHING
The conference period is the hottest (around 28-30 degrees Centigrade)
of the year. There may be some irregular showers. Participants are
advised to wear light and comfortable--typical summer--clothing for
both daytime and night-time.
 
3.KOREAN CURRENCY
The basic unit of Korean currency is the Won. The current exchange
rate for US$ 1.00 is about 800 Won. Due to fluctuation, participants
are advised to check the current exchange rates at the time of the
Conference.  Currency exchange services are available at a bank in the
Kimpo International Airport, and other banks in the city.
 
4.CONFERENCE PLACE AND HOW TO GET THERE
 
All the events including lectures, forum, paper presentations will
take place at Main Building, Sookmyung Women's University, Seoul. If
you are not supposed to stay at Hoam Faculty House, following
information will be useful to get to the conference place.  Local city
buses: take #57, #58, get off at Sookmyung stop.  Subways: take #1,
get off at Namyoung stop. Or take #4 line, get off at Sooktaeipku
'Sookmyung Women's University Entrance' stop.  From the Airport: take
Limousine, get off at Seoul City Hall. And take taxi to SWU.  From the
Hoam Faculty House, the relevant information will wait for you at the
front desk upon your arrival. (We are currently seeking for the most
convenient and economical way for you to get to SWU from HFH.)
 
5. SICOGG '96 RECEPTION
 
Participants will meet together, having a drink and enjoying Korean
foods, in the Wednesday evening on July 3, hosted by the President of
SWU. The reception place will be SWU, the conference place.
 
6. CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS
As you know, the conference proceedings will be published right after
the conference, no later than July 31. We are going to collect paper
manuscripts and disks during the conference. Please bring them to
Seoul.  Your paper will be published as presented at the
conference. We are sorry, but your paper will not be accepted after
the conference. The deadline is July 6, 1996.
 
7. HANDOUTS
Just bring one hard copy of the handout. We will make the relevant
numbers of copies for your presentation.
 
8. Your Flight Information
Would you please let us know your itinerary including your arrival
date/time and flight as well as your departure date/time and flight,
as soon as possible?
 
 
For further information or correspondences, feel free to contact:
 
Prof. Hee-Don Ahn, Dept. of English, Konkuk University, Seoul 143-701,
Korea
   +82-2-450-3338 (Office), -459-7666 (Home), -201-8419 (Fax)
 hdahn at kkucc.konkuk.ac.kr
 
Enclosed is the mini-poster, the near-final program, and the style
sheet of SICOGG 96. Note that there are slight changes in the program
schedule. The handbook and the final program will be available on
registration day, July 1.
 
We are looking forward to meeting you in Seoul very soon.
 
                           Sincerely yours,
                           Organizing and Executive Committee
                           SICOGG 96
 
                          Prof. Hee-Don Ahn, Konkuk University
                          Prof. Myung-Yoon Kang, Korea University
                          Prof. Yong-Suck Kim, Hansung University
                          Prof. Sookhee Lee, Sookmyung Women's University
 
SICOGG 96 Program Overview
     July 1- 6, 1996
     Main Hall, Sookmyung Women's University
 
Series of Lectures:
Michael Brody (University College London): "Towards perfect syntax"
Tanya Reinhart (Tel Aviv University): "Interface economy"
Kenneth Wexler (MIT): "Morphosyntactic development, universal
                   principles and very early parameter-setting"
Dong-Whee Yang: "The Korean phrase structure in the minimalist program"
 
Forum on "Morphosyntax in Korean"
Speakers:
Hee-Don Ahn (Konkuk University): "A study of syntactic
                                    word-formation"
Peter Sells (Stanford University): "Case, categories and projection
                                    in Korean and Japanese"
James H.-S. Yoon (Seoul National University): "A typology of
                 morphosyntactic interaction English vs.  Korean"
     Discussants:
           Hak-Sung Han (Kyung Hee University)
           Hyung Youb Kim (Korea University)
 
7/1(Mon)
 9:00 - 10:00 : Registration and Opening Ceremony
10:00 - 11:20 : Yang I
11:20 - 12:30 : Yang II
12:30 - 13:40 : Lunch
13:40 - 15:00 : Brody I
15:00 - 16:20 : Brody II
16:20 - 18:00 : Paper Sessions I
 
7/2(Tue)
10:00 - 11:20 : Brody III
11:20 - 12:30 : Wexler I
12:30 - 13:40 : Lunch
13:40 - 15:00 : Wexler II
15:00 - 16:20 : Brody IV
16:20 - 18:00 : Paper Sessions II
 
7/3(Wed)
10:00 - 11:20 : Reinhart I
11:20 - 12:30 : Reinhart II
12:30 - 13:40 : Lunch
13:40 - 15:00 : Wexler III
15:00 - 16:20 :Wexler IV
16:20 - 18:00 : Paper Sessions III
18:00 -       : Reception Party
 
7/4(Thu)
10:00 - 11:20 : Brody IV
11:20 - 12:30 : Wexler V
12:30 - 13:40 : Lunch
13:40 - 15:00 : Reinhart III
15:00 - 16:20 : Yang III
16:20 - 18:00 : Paper Sessions IV
 
7/5(Fri)
10:00 - 11:20 : Reinhart IV
11:20 - 12:30 : Wexler VI
12:30 - 13:40 : Lunch
14:00 - 18:00 : Forum on "Morphosyntax in Korean"
 
7/6(Sat)
10:00 - 11:20 : Reinhart V
11:20 - 12:30 : Reinhart VI
12:30 - 13:40 : Lunch
13:40 - 15:00 : Brody VI
15:00 - 18:00 : Paper Sessions V
 
SICOGG 96 Paper Session
 
July 1 (Monday)
Session I-A
 
Cho, Eun (Cornell University): Multiple Feature Checking and
Accusative Case in the Passive
 
Lee, Sookhee (Sookmyung Women's University): Serial Verbs and
Parametric Feature Erasure
 
Yi, Eun-Young (Cornell University): Complex Predicates and the
Structure of the Serial Verb Constructions in Korean
 
Session I-B
 
Ahn, Sung-Ho (Hanyang University): ACD Constructions and LF Checking
 
Lee, Hyunoo and Byung Choon Lee (Inha University): Towards a
Minimalist Approach to the Syntax and Semantics of susulo
 
Kim,Sun-Woong (Kwangwoon University): Numeral Quantifiers in Korean
 
July 2 (Tuesday)
Session II-A
Albizu, Pablo (USC): Generalized Person-Case Constraint: A Case For A
Syntax-Driven Inflectional Morphology
Fukushima, Kazuhiko (Kansai Gaidai University): Economy in Morphological Change
Yoon, Sang-Hun (University of Wisconsin-Madison): AgrC and
Wh-Interpretation in Korean
 
Session II-B
 
Manga, Louis (University of Ottawa): A Minimalist Account of
Accusative and Ergative Languages
 
Lim, Jeeya (University ofWashington): Case Alternations on the Object
 Externalization and Internalization of the Subject
 
Shi, Chung-Kon (KAIST): Morphological Merger and Theta-Role Assignment
in Korean
 
July 3 (Wednesday)
Session III-A
Choi, Kiyong (Kwangwoon University): Base Adjunction of X0 to Y0: A
case of Korean Focus Constructions
Kang, Sun-Young (Ulsan University): A Note on the Light Verb ha- in
Korean
Hagstrom, Paul (MIT): Do-Support in Korean
 
Session III-B
Tsoulas, George (University of York): Empty Pronouns, the EPP, and the
 Morphosyntax of Finiteness in a Minimalist Framework
Sung, Chang-Sup and Kyu-Hong Hwang (Dong-A U/U of Washington): Empty
Subjects in English Bare Imperatives
Kim, Kwang-Sup (Chongju University): Multiple Subject Constructions in
Korean and English
 
July 4 (Thursday)
Session IV-A
McGinnis, Martha Jo (MIT): Two Types of Blocking
Lee, Jeong-Shik (Wonkwang University): Verbal Morphology in Korean
Hosoi, Hironobu (McGill University): Japanese Renyoo Inflectional
Form, Conjunctive Particle -te and Control
 
Session IV-B
Kim, Youngkook (University of London): On the Structure of Relative
Clauses in English
Lee, Man Ki (Seoul National University):.Move-F in the Overt Syntax
Evans, Hywel (Tsuru University): The Distribution of wh-phrases and
 Feature-Checking
 
July 6 (Saturday)
Session V-A
Jung, Yeun-Jin (Dong-Eui University): Nominalization Revisited: A
Lexicalist View
Cho, JunMo (University of Toronto): Checking Theory and Coordinate
Structures in Korean
Oku, Satoshi (Hokkaido Univ/UConn): VP-Fronting and Verbal Morphology
Imai, Takashi (Tsuru University): Definite/Indefinite Licensing of NPs in
 Determinerless Languages
Jang, Youngjun (Harvard University): Pseudogapping, Locative
Inversion, and the EPP
 
Session V-B
Yanagida, Yuko (Kochi University): CP in Japanese and English
Moon, Gui-Sun (Hansung University): Syntactic Wh-Movement in Korean
Lee, Rhanghyeyun (Seoul National University): Some Problems for Make
Shortest Movement?
Sohn, Keun-Won (Sookmyung Women's University): Reconstruction in
A-Movement
Choi, Young-Sik (MIT): Korean Negation and Negative Polarity Item
Licensing
 
               THE KOREAN GENERATIVE GRAMMAR CIRCLE
               Style Sheet for SICOGG 96 Proceedings
 
A. Please send us a hard copy and disk by July 6, 1996.  Submitted
papers will be photographed directly, and the format of this style
sheet must be followed exactly. KGCC cannot and will not retype a
paper. Papers improperly formatted will not be published.
 
B. General Notes:
   1. The published paper is the presented paper.
   2. Limit text to 10 to 12 pages.
   3. Deadline: Papers with disks should be handed to us during the
      conference.
   4. Use high-quality, non-erasable paper.
   5. Times/Elite typefaces are preferred.
   6. Proofread carefully!
 
C. Page Formats:
 
   1. Use Standard Letter Size (8.5" +11") or A4 size(8.2" +11.73")
papers.
   2. For Letter Size: Margins are 1.5" top, left and right, and 1.0"
at bottom.
      For A4 Size: Margins are 1.5" top, 1.5" left, 1.2" right, and
1.73" at bottom.
   3. Lightly pencil page numbers on the back of each page.
   4. The first page should include the following (centered except for
the text):
 
            Title of Paper, at 1.5" from the top
                       (skip a line)
                         Your Name
          Institutional (not departmental) affiliation
                        (skip a line)
                  Text begins on this line
 
   5. Text must be single spaced, with each new paragraph indented
0.5" without skipping a line.  Separate examples from the text by one
space; leave no spaces between consecutive examples.
 
   6. Footnotes/Endnotes: Content notes only (as in Linguistic
Inquiry), Endnotes be grouped immediately following the text.
(Footnotes preferable)
 
   7. Bibliography: Immediately after endnotes; do not place on a
separate page.  Follow the recent style in LI.
 
For further questions, contact:
The Korean Generative Grammar Circle
 c/o Prof. Hee-Don Ahn               Phone: +822-450-3338(O), 459-7666(H),
 201-8419(Fax)
 Dept. of English, Konkuk University, Seoul Korea          Email:
 hdahn at kkucc.konkuk.ac.kr
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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