Forwarded mail....
Andrew Carnie
carnie at linguistlist.org
Fri Aug 8 15:57:24 UTC 1997
Here is a copy of the Celtling FAQ.
Best,
A
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 08 Aug 1997 11:45:18 EDT
From: acarnie at MIT.EDU
To: carnie at linguistlist.org
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CELTLING
The Electronic Email list for the theoretical
linguistics of the Modern
Celtic Languages
**********************************************
Information Sheet
WHAT IS CELTLING?
Celtling is a moderated email list for the discussion of
theoretical syntax, morphology, phonology, and phonetics of
the Modern Celtic Languages (Irish, Scots Gaelic, Manx, Welsh
Breton, and Cornish).
WHO OWNS CELTLING?
The list is a private email list owned by Andrew Carnie and
operated through the listserver at Project Athena at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Owner's address:
Andrew Carnie
Department of Linguistics
Harvard University
77 Dunster St.
Cambridge MA 02138
acarnie at linguistlist.org
As a list operated through MIT, Subscribers to Celtling are
subject to the rules of Conduct for Electronic Mail
as set out by Project Athena and MIT. Violation of these rules
will result in removal from the list.
HOW DO I SUBSCRIBE/UNSUBSCRIBE?
Send email to LISTSERV at MITVMA.MIT.EDU
with the single line:
SUBSCRIBE CELTLING <your_name>
Requests for subscription will take 36 hours to process
To unsubscribe send the line:
SIGNOFF CELTLING
HOW DO I POST:
Send mail to
celtling at mitvma. mit.edu
this mail will be forwarded to Andrew Carnie, who in turn will
forward it to the list.
WHAT ARE APPROPRIATE SUBJECTS OF DISCUSSION ON THIS LIST?
Any aspect of the Syntax
Semantics
Phonology
Morphology
Phonology
Phonetics
of the Modern Celtic Languages.
Book/paper/conference announcements.
All frameworks of linguistics (Generative or Descriptive)
are welcome.
WHAT IS **SOMETIMES APPROPRIATE**?
This list is for the discussion of Theoretical Linguistics
of the modern Celtic Languages. Thus, the following topics
are sometimes relevant to the discussion of the theoretical
linguistics of the Celtic languages and sometimes are not.
(I ask subscribers to use their own judgment about what is
"relevant").
Sociolinguistics
Historical Linguistics
Psycholinguistics
Dialectology
Computational Linguistics
Issues in these fields that do not bear on the theoretical
linguistics should be posted to Celtic-L, Gaelic-L, Welsh-L
or Indoeuropean-l at cornell.edu
WHAT IS **INAPPROPRIATE** FOR CELTLING?
The following topics of discussion have been (quite arbitrarly)
declared inappropriate for this list
orthography
etymology
The Pedagogy (learning) of the Celtic Languages
literature
folklore
Discussion of the above should be directed to Gaelic-L at irlearn.ucd.ie,
Welsh-L at irlearn.ucd.ie, or Celtic-L at irlearn.ucd.ie or
indoeuropean-l at cornell.edu
It should be noted that the owner feels that the above topics
are valid topics for discussion and academic pursuit, but are
not appropriate to a list on theoretical linguistics, when other
lists exist for these purposes.
WHAT LANGUAGES CAN I POST IN?
English, Irish, Scots Gaelic, Manx, Breton, Welsh, Cornish, French
But please remember that not everyone on the list necessarily
speaks YOUR celtic language. The owner suggests then that English
be the Lingua Franca for the list.
Further Questions? Please direct them to Andrew Carnie personally
More information about the Celtling
mailing list