[Corpora-List] Final CFP: GURT 2010 Arabic Language and Linguistics
Graham Katz
graham.katz at googlemail.com
Fri Nov 13 16:12:23 UTC 2009
Abstract Deadline: November 15th, 2009
Once again we hope this meeting will provide an opportunity for
researchers to share their work on
Arabic Computational Linguistics with each other and with a wider
Arabic Linguistic audience.
G. Katz
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Georgetown University Round Table 2010: Arabic Language and Linguistics
March 12 - 14, Washington DC
The study of the Arabic language has a long and rich history: Earliest
grammatical accounts date from the 8th century, and included full
syntactic,
morphological and phonological analyses of the vernaculars and of
Classical and
Modern Standard Arabic -- the religious language of the Quran and the
language
of poetry. In recent years the academic study of Arabic has become
increasingly
sophisticated and broad.
GURT 2010 seeks to explore the Arabic language from a variety of
perspectives
including research from the following linguistic subfields: Syntax,
Semantics,
Morphology, Phonology and Phonetics, Computational linguistics,
Historical
linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Anthropological linguistics.
Plenary Lectures:
"Hybridity and the Crossing of Linguistic Borders"
Mushira Eid, The University of Utah
"Statistical and Symbolic Paradigms in Arabic Computational
Linguistics"
Ali Farghaly, Monterey Institute of International Studies
"Can Arabic Sociolinguistics develop without Arabic Dialectology?:
The Case of Urban Sociolinguistics"
Catherine Miller, French Council of Research (CNRS)
"Critical Languages and Critical Thinking: Re-framing Academic Arabic
Programs"
Karin Ryding, Georgetown University
"Ideology, Grammar Making, and the Standardization of Arabic"
Yasir Suleiman, The University of Cambridge
GURT 2010 Conference Workshops (Friday, March 12)
Arabic Language Teaching
Raghda El-Essawi, The American University of Cairo
Tutorial on Arabic Computational Linguistics
Nizar Habash and Mona Diab, Columbia University
Arabic Language Policies and Planning
Keith Walters, Portland State University
We invite proposals for presentations related to Arabic Language and
Linguistics
(1) Colloquia: Scheduled for 2-hour blocks. Colloquium organizers may
organize as they choose,
but time should be allocated for opening and closing remarks,
presentations, discussion and audience response.
Organizers serve as the liaison between participants and the
conference organizers.
(2) Individual papers: 20 minutes long with a 10-minute discussion
period.
(3) Poster presentations: displayed for a 2-hour block; an opportunity
to report on work in progress in one-on-one discussions.
The abstract submission deadline is: November 15, 2009.
For more information please visit: http://www8.georgetown.edu/college/gurt/2010
Organizers: Reem Bassiouney; Graham Katz
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