Formal Approaches To Slavic Linguistics (FASL) 13: Second Call For Papers
Mila Tasseva-Kurktchieva
tassevak at GWM.SC.EDU
Tue Oct 14 12:44:39 UTC 2003
Formal Approaches To Slavic Linguistics 13: The Columbia Meeting, SECOND
CALL FOR PAPERS
DATE: Feb. 27-29, 2004
ORGANIZED BY: Linguistics Program, University of South Carolina
WEBSITE: http://www.cla.sc.edu/LING/FASL13/
PLENARY SPEAKERS:
Leonard H. Babby (Princeton University)
How small can infinite complements be?: evidence from Russian
Christina Bethin (SUNY, Stony Brook)
Belorussian vowel reduction
Roumyana Slabakova (University of Iowa)
Perfective prefixes: What they are, what flavors they come in, and how
they are acquired.
ABSTRACT DEADLINE: November 7, 2003
ABSTRACT GUIDELINES:
Abstracts are invited for 20-minute presentations (plus 10 minutes
discussion) on topics dealing with formal aspects of any area of
theoretical Slavic linguistics (synchronic or diachronic), including
syntax, semantics, morphology, phonology, discourse analysis,
psycholinguistics, and L1 and L2 acquisition. Abstracts should be
anonymous and no longer than one page (an additional page for references
and examples can be included), with margins of at least 1 inch, letter
size 11. Submissions are limited to one singly authored and one jointly
authored abstract per author or two jointly authored abstracts.
ABSTRACT SUBMISSION:
Abstracts should be sent electronically to the conference e-mail address
(fasl13 at gwm.sc.edu) as attachments in PDF, RTF, .doc or .wpd format. If
non-standard fonts are required, use the embed fonts option when you
save the file. The authors information (name, affiliation, telephone and
fax numbers, e-mail address) together with the title of the paper should
be in a separate file or included as part of the body of the e-mail
message.
CONTACT:
fasl13 at gwm.sc.edu
phone: (803) 777-2063
fax: (803) 777-7514
ADDRESS:
FASL 13 Organizing Committee
c/o John Alderete
Linguistics Program
University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208
USA
The USC Linguistics Program acknowledges support for FASL 13 from:
College of Liberal Arts, University of South Carolina
Department of English Language and Literature, University of South Carolina
Department of Languages, Literature, and Culture, University of South
Carolina
Slavica Publishers at Indiana University
Princeton University Program in Linguistics
The Slavic and East European Language Resource Center (SEELRC), Duke
University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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