<div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr"><div dir="ltr"><div><div>Dear SLLing-listers,</div><div> </div><div>The latest issue of <em>Sign Language and Linguistics </em>is just out. Here you have the table of contents.</div>
<div> </div><div>Roland Pfau & Josep Quer, editors</div>
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</div><div><em></em> </div><div><em>Sign Language and Linguistics</em><br> Volume Number: 16<br> Issue Number: 1<br> Issue Date: 2013<br><em></em></div><div><em>Table of Contents<br><br> Articles<br></em><br> The phonological and semantic bifurcation of the functions of an articulator: HEAD in questions in Turkish Sign Language<br>
Aslı Göksel and Meltem Kelepir 1 – 30<br><br> Acquiring plurality in directional verbs<br> Lynn Y-S. Hou 31 – 73<br><br> <em>Squib</em><br><br> Handshape is the hardest path in Portuguese Sign Language acquisition: Towards a universal modality constraint<br>
Patrícia do Carmo, Ana Mineiro, Joana Castelo Branco, Ronice Müller de Quadros and Alexandre Castro-Caldas 75 – 90<br><br> <em>Book review</em><br><br> Brenda Nicodemus, Prosodic Markers and Utterance Boundaries in American Sign Language Interpretation<br>
Reviewed by Svetlana Dachkovsky 91 – 96<br><br> <em>Dissertation Abstracts</em><br><br> The meaning of space in Catalan Sign Language (LSC): Reference, specificity and structure in signed discourse<br> Gemma Barberà 97 – 105<br>
<br> The nature of the semantic scale: Evidence from sign language research<br> Kathryn Davidson 106 – 110<br><br> The lexical structure of German Sign Language (DGS) in the light of empirical LSP lexicography: On how to integrate iconicity in a corpus-based lexicon model<br>
Reiner Konrad 111 – 118<br><br></div></div>
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