Arabic-L:LING:NACAL program
Dilworth Parkinson
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Thu Jan 12 17:20:52 UTC 2012
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Arabic-L: Wed 11 Jan 2012
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1) Subject:NACAL program
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1)
Date: 11 Jan 2012
From:reposted from LINGUIST
Subject:NACAL program
North American Conference on Afroasiatic Linguistics
Short Title: NACAL
Date: 18-Feb-2012 - 19-Feb-2012
Location: New Brunswick, NJ, USA
Contact: Charles Häberl
Contact Email: afroasiatic at gmail.com
Meeting URL: http://www.nacal.org
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics
Language Family(ies): Afroasiatic
Other Specialty: Afroasiatic
Meeting Description:
The North American Conference on Afroasiatic Linguistics (NACAL)
offers a venue for the presentation and discussion of original
research on linguistic topics relevant to the languages of the
Afroasiatic phylum (Chadic, Berber, Cushitic, Omotic, Egyptian, and
Semitic). Now entering its 40th year, NACAL has held annual meetings
since 1973. Previous meetings have been held in Albuquerque, Ann
Arbor, Austin, Baltimore, Boston, Cambridge, Chicago, Los Angeles,
Nashville, New Haven, San Diego, Seattle, Toronto, and several other
cities in the United States and Canada.
Standard accommodations for NACAL 40 will be available at the
conference venue, the Continuing Studies Conference Center, at the
discount rate of $69/night.
http://cscc.rutgers.edu/
Deluxe accommodations are also available in the immediate vicinity of
the conference venue.
Saturday, February 18th, 2012
Saturday Morning Session
Arabic (8:00am-9:15am)
1. Fassi Fehri, Abdelkader (KAICAL LSM, Rabat & KAICAL, Ryad)
Generality in the Arabic Grammar of Count/Mass
2. Hary, Benjamin (Emory University) On the Linguistic Connection
between Religiolects, Migration, and Archaic Features
3. Tirosh-Becker, Ofra (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
The Use of Different Registers of Algerian Judeo-Arabic: A Case Study
Break (9:15am-9:30am)
Notes from the Field (9:30am-10:20am)
1. Lahrouchi, Mohamed (University Paris 8) Glide - High vowel
Alternations in Berber
2. Owens, Jonathan (Bayreuth University) Statistically-graded
Finiteness: Finite Predication and Gerunds in Glavda
Break (10:20am-10:30am)
Arabic and Historical Linguistics I (10:30am-11:45am)
1. Marmorstein, Michal (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
Reconsidering the 'Perfect-Imperfect' Opposition in the Verbal System
of Classical Arabic
2. Lowenstamm, Jean (Université Paris Diderot) 3rd Person Feminine
Inflection in the Perfective Paradigm of Moroccan Arabic
3. Testen, David Some Unexpectedly Sound Plural Stems in Arabic and Elsewhere
Lunch (11:45am-12:45pm)
Saturday Afternoon Session
Arabic and Historical Linguistics II (12:45pm-2:00pm)
1. Pat-El, Na'ama (The University of Texas at Austin) The Morphosyntax
of Nominal Antecedents in Semitic
2. Owens, Jonathan (Bayreuth University) The Historical Linguistics
of the Intrusive *-n in Arabic and West Semitic
3. Alexander Magidow (University of Texas - Austin) Information
Structure and the Development of -Vn in some Arabic Dialects from
Original Case Markings
Reconstruction/Classification (2:00pm-3:15pm)
1. Militarev, Alexander (Russian State University for the Humanities)
The Main Problems and Goals of Afroasiatic/Afrasian Comparative
Linguistics
2. Hudson, Grover (Michigan State University) Agaw Cognates in South
Ethiosemitic Tell Us Nothing
3. Wilson-Wright, Aren (The University of Texas at Austin) The Number
One in Proto-Semitic
Break (3:15pm-3:30pm)
Technology (3:30pm-5:45pm)
1. Butts, Aaron Michael (Yale University) Corpus Linguistics in a
Digital Age: The Case of Greek Loanwords in Classical Syriac
2. Gragg, Gene (University of Chicago) What Does a Paradigm Database Look Like?
3. Kottsieper, Ingo (Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen and
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität, Münster) The Qumran Dictionary and
Its Database
4. Teferra, Anbessa (Tel Aviv University) Challenges in the
Translation of a Hebrew-Amharic Multimedia Dictionary
5. Mizrahi, Noam (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel) From
Textual Corruption to Lexical Innovation: The Case of Hebrew Madhebā
Break (5:45pm-6:00pm)
Prof. Dr. H. Ekkehard Wolff (Universität Leipzig), Reminiscence (6:00pm-7:00pm)
Annual NACAL Dinner (7:30pm),
Makeda Restaurant
Address:
338 George Street
New Brunswick, NJ 08901
Telephone:
(732) 545-5115
Sunday, February 19th, 2012
Sunday Morning Session
Modern South Arabian and Ethiosemitic I (8:00am-9:15am)
1. Rubin, Aaron (Penn State University) The Jibbāli Future
2. Al Aghbari, Khalsa (University of Florida at Gainsville) Jebbāli
Plurals: Real Reduplication or Templatic Affixation?
3. Bakir, Murtadha J. (University of Jordan) Negation in Jibbali
Modern South Arabian and Ethiosemitic II (9:15am-10:30am)
1. Kapeliuk, Olga (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
Insubordination: a Common Isogloss Between Modern South Arabian and
Ethio-Semitic
2. Assefa, Shiferaw (University of Kansas) Stem Formation in Amharic:
An Old Problem with a New Approach
3. Demeke, Girma A. (Institute of Semitic Studies, Princeton) A
Diachronic Analysis of Copular Constructions in Amharic
Break (10:30am-10:45am)
Epigraphy and Philology (10:45am-12:30pm)
1. Cohen, Eran (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel) Circumstantial
Expressions in Old-Babylonian Akkadian
2. Daniels, Peter T. The Further Quest for Ugaritic
3. Kerr, Robert (Wilfred Laurier University) The Sibilants in Phoenico-Punic
4. Pope, Jeremy (The College of William & Mary) Epithets for
Appetite: A Linguistic Contribution to the Culinary History of
Northeast Africa
Lunch (12:30pm-1:30pm)
Sunday Afternoon Session
Hebrew (1:30pm-3:15pm)
1. Cook, Edward M. (Catholic University of America) Ambitransitive
Verbs in Biblical Hebrew? The Case of שרץ
2. Jones, Andrew R. (University of Toronto) Replacement Structures and
Apposition in Biblical Hebrew
3. Rendsburg, Gary A. (Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey)
What We Can Learn about Other Northwest Semitics Dialects from Reading
the Bible
4. Shwayder, Kobey (University of Pennsylvania) The Underlying
Representation of the Root in Modern Hebrew: Evidence from Stress and
Vowel-Deletion
NACAL 40 Business Meeting
C.G. HÄBERL, Rutgers, the State University of
New Jersey, Convener (3:15 - 4:00 PM).
Adjournment, 4:00 PM
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