[Lingtyp] 1st Call for papers Workshop Habituals and habitual auxiliaries - Paris 7-8 Oct 2024

Kees Hengeveld P.C.Hengeveld at uva.nl
Wed Mar 20 09:58:06 UTC 2024


Workshop Habituals and habitual auxiliaries
Date: 07-Oct-2024 - 08-Oct-2024
Location: Paris, France
Contact: wshabitualsparis2024 at gmail.com<mailto:wshabitualsparis2024 at gmail.com>
Website: https://www.sfl.cnrs.fr/synsem-colloque-habituals-and-habitual-auxiliaries<https://eur04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.sfl.cnrs.fr%2Fsynsem-colloque-habituals-and-habitual-auxiliaries&data=05%7C02%7CP.C.Hengeveld%40uva.nl%7Cfa5da317f7164254083708dc4290c5cb%7Ca0f1cacd618c4403b94576fb3d6874e5%7C0%7C0%7C638458436760119337%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=53y0WzIBAjqLIcDEkSn65mZgIQxam4C0ZN5%2BKF%2BSJLU%3D&reserved=0>

The Syntax and Semantics group of the UMR 7023 Structures Formelles du Langage and the Research Group Habituals of the ACLC, U. v. Amsterdam will hold a Workshop on Habituals and habitual auxiliaries on Mon 7 and Tue 8 Oct 2024.

The workshop will be held in hybrid format at UPS Pouchet, 59 rue Pouchet 75017 Paris and on zoom.

Invited speakers
- Nora Boneh (Hebrew University, Jerusalem)
- Sune Gregersen (Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Frisian Institute)
- Iva Kovač (U. Wien)

Deadline for submissions 1 June 2024

We gratefully acknowledge the sponsors of the workshop
- U. Paris 8 (AAP événement 2024)
- Research group Structures formelles du langage (UMR 7023 - SFL CNRS & U. Paris 8)
- Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (U. van Amsterdam)
- IRN Typology across modalities (CNRS)

Background Habitual aspect has been defined in various ways in the literature. A widely used definition is that of Comrie (1976: 27-28), who defines habituals as forms which "describe a situation which is characteristic of an extended period of time". Similar characterizations of habituals are given e.g. by Dahl (1985: Ch. 3) and Carlson (2012), while other scholars have defined habituality with explicit reference to repetition (pluractionality, iterativity, etc.); see e.g. Brinton (1987), Xrakovskij (1997), and Bertinetto & Lenci (2012). More recently Gregersen & Hengeveld (forthc.) define habitual aspect as 'unbounded repetition of an event or situation that typically occurs'. There are three ingredients to this definition:
- Repetition: a habit manifests itself as a repetition of a certain situation over time (cf. multiplicativity).
- Unboundedness (Fortuin 2023): repetition involved in habitual series is unbounded, distinct from bounded iterative expressions as in, e.g. He did it twice.
- Typicality (Comrie 1976; Dik 1997, Gregersen & van Lier forthc.): habitual aspect expresses that a situation is characteristic for someone or something (different from simple repetition).

Expressions of habituality are often also used for related categories:
- West Greenlandic -tar: habitual and multiplicative (Fortescue 1984: 279, Trondjem 2012: 67, 70), which share repetition.
- Coptic habitual auxiliary šare: habitual and generic statements (Van der Vliet & Zakrzewska forthc.), which share unboundedness.
- English used to: past habitual and discontinuous past (The temple of Diana used to stand at Ephesus, Comrie 1976, Plungian & van der Auwera 2006), which share typicality.

Workshop topics We invite contributions on any aspect of the grammar of habituals and habitual auxiliaries, including but not limited to the following questions:
(i) Is habitual aspect a unified category or can it be split up into different subcategories? (Boneh & Doron 2008, 2013)
(ii) what are the relations in terms of formal expression with genericity, multiplicativity, and other categories of event quantification?
(iii) what is the source and destination of habitual markers in grammaticalization?
(iv) what are the restrictions on habitual aspect with respect to tense?
(v) what explains the connection between (past) habitual and discontinuous past reference?
(vi) does habitual aspect belong to the realis or the irrealis domain or both? (vii) how does habitual marking interact with nominal arguments (singular indefinites, bare plurals)?

Abstracts We invite submissions for 25 minute talks (+10min discussion) in English. Abstracts should not be longer than two pages (Times New Roman 12 pt, single space, 2,4 cm margins). Abstracts have to be anonymous.
Please submit your abstract in pdf format by email to wshabitualsparis2024 at gmail.com<mailto:wshabitualsparis2024 at gmail.com> and make sure the text and the name of the pdf do not contain the name(s) of the author(s).
Authors may submit a maximum of two abstracts, only one of which may be single-authored.

Deadline for submissions: 1 June 2024
Notification of authors: 15 July 2024
Workshop: 7-8 Oct 2024

Website https://www.sfl.cnrs.fr/synsem-colloque-habituals-and-habitual-auxiliaries<https://eur04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.sfl.cnrs.fr%2Fsynsem-colloque-habituals-and-habitual-auxiliaries&data=05%7C02%7CP.C.Hengeveld%40uva.nl%7Cfa5da317f7164254083708dc4290c5cb%7Ca0f1cacd618c4403b94576fb3d6874e5%7C0%7C0%7C638458436760130318%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=iBEhdH74Uw8hl5Gs7WitECpHU9R23vo3VdRxBTQZrEs%3D&reserved=0>
Contact @ wshabitualsparis2024 at gmail.com<mailto:wshabitualsparis2024 at gmail.com>

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