15.522, Calls: General Ling/Poland; General Ling/France

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Mon Feb 9 14:17:58 UTC 2004


LINGUIST List:  Vol-15-522. Mon Feb 9 2004. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 15.522, Calls: General Ling/Poland; General Ling/France

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1)
Date:  Mon, 9 Feb 2004 07:57:39 -0500 (EST)
From:  geoff at ifa.amu.edu.pl
Subject:  Intercomponential Interfaces

2)
Date:  Mon, 9 Feb 2004 07:09:04 -0500 (EST)
From:  miller at univ-lille3.fr
Subject:  International Conference on Deverbal Nouns

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Mon, 9 Feb 2004 07:57:39 -0500 (EST)
From:  geoff at ifa.amu.edu.pl
Subject:  Intercomponential Interfaces

Intercomponential Interfaces

Date: 18-May-2004 - 20-May-2004
Location: Poznan, Poland
Contact: Geoff Schwartz
Contact Email: geoff at ifa.amu.edu.pl
Meeting URL: http://elex.amu.edu.pl/ifa/plm/index.htm

Linguistic Sub-field: General Linguistics

Call Deadline: 01-Mar-2004
This is a session of the following conference: Poznan Linguistic
Meeting

Meeting Description:

A session open for papers touching on the interface between two or
more subfields of linguistics. Organiser: Prof. Geoff Schwartz
(Poznan)



Linguists of all species, be they phonologists, phoneticians,
syntacticians or semanticians often get into the habit of being very
concentrated on their own specific subfields. Because of this, views
on many linguistic riddles are occasionally narrow, lacking the
perspective that an outside observer can provide. This, however, is
starting to change, and we see more and more research examining how
various linguistic subfields can interact.

The Interfaces panel at the Poznan Linguistic Meeting seeks to
encourage this trend, and is open to any paper touching on at least 2
areas of linguistics (syntax-phonology, morphology-syntax,
phonetics-phonology, syntax- semantics, etc). Speakers are thus
encouraged to make their presentations user-friendly and interesting
to linguists who specialization might be slightly different from their
own. We hope to see you in Poznan in the spring for some interfacing!


-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Mon, 9 Feb 2004 07:09:04 -0500 (EST)
From:  miller at univ-lille3.fr
Subject:  International Conference on Deverbal Nouns

International Conference on Deverbal Nouns

Date: 23-Sep-2004 - 25-Sep-2004
Location: Lille, France
Contact: Daniele Monseur
Contact Email: deverbalnouns at univ-lille3.fr
Meeting URL:

Linguistic Sub-field: General Linguistics

Call Deadline: 15-Feb-2004

Meeting Description:

Deverbal nouns are a crucial topic of linguistic inquiry because their
analysis involves problems of morphology, syntax and semantics and can
shed light on the interfaces between these components. Abstracts are
invited on all questions pertaining to deverbal nouns.

UMR « SILEX », UniversityLille 3, France
23-25 September 2004
3rd Call for papers

Invited Speakers: Artemis Alexiadou (Universität Stuttgart), David
Dowty (Ohio State University), Jane Grimshaw (Rutger's University),
Françoise Kerleroux (Université Paris 10)

Program Committee:
Artemis Alexiadou (Universität zu Stuttgart, Deutschland)
Peter Blumenthal (Universität zu Köln, Deutschland)
Geert Booij (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy (University of Canterbury, New Zealand)
Denis Creissels (UMR 5596, CNRS & Université de Lyon 2, France)
Georgette Dal (UMR 8528, CNRS & Université de Lille 3, France)
David Dowty (The Ohio State University, USA)
Cécile Fabre (UMR 5610, CNRS & Université de Toulouse-le Mirail,
France)
Bernard Fradin (UMR 7110, CNRS & Université de Paris 7, France)
Claire Gardent (UMR 7503, CNRS & Université de Nancy 1, France)
Jacqueline Giry-Schneider (Université de Paris 8)
Danièle Godard (UMR 7110, CNRS & Université de Paris 7, France)
Jane Grimshaw (Rutgers University, USA)
Heidi Harley (University of Arizona, USA)
Jacques Jayez (ENS-LSH Lyon, France)
Françoise Kerleroux (UMR 7114, Université de Paris 10, France)
Georges Kleiber (Université de Strasbourg 2, France)
Angelika Kratzer (University Massachusetts, USA)
Manfred Krifka (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Deustchland)
Judith Meinschaefer (Universität zu Konstanz, Deutschland)
Philip Miller (UMR 8528, CNRS & Université de Lille 3, France)
Friederike Moltmann (University of London, UK)
Thomas Roeper (University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA)
Lucia Tovena (UMR 8528, CNRS & Université de Lille 3, France)
Danièle Van de Velde (UMR 8528, CNRS & Université de Lille 3,
France)

Organizing Committee:
Georgette Dal (UMR 8528, CNRS & Université de Lille 3, France)
Philip Miller (UMR 8528, CNRS & Université de Lille 3, France)
Lucia Tovena (UMR 8528, CNRS & Université de Lille 3, France)
Danièle Van de Velde (UMR 8528, CNRS & Université de Lille 3,
France)

Calendar:
Submission deadline: February 15th 2004
Notification of acceptance: May 15th 2004
Preliminary program: June 15th 2004
Meeting: September 23rd-25th 2004

Deverbal nouns are a crucial topic of linguistic inquiry because their
analysis involves problems of morphology, syntax and semantics and can
shed light on the interfaces between these components. Abstracts are
invited on all questions pertaining to deverbal nouns, including

- The different morphological processes constructing nouns from verbs
- How these morphological processes influence the syntactic and
semantic properties of the resulting noun
- The relationship between the argument structure of the source verb
and that of the resulting noun
- The relationship between the syntactic subcategorization properties
of the source verb and those of the resulting deverbal noun
- The semantic interpretation of deverbal nouns and its links to
argument structure, subcategorization, and morphology
- The status of nouns which are semantically linked to a verbal
predicate without there being any morphological relationship between
the two.
- The status of gerunds and other intermediate forms between nouns and
verbs
- Comparative and typological studies of deverbal nouns
- Studies of the choice in discourse between an NP headed by a
deverbal noun and a finite clause headed by the source verb

Submissions on other languages than English and French will also be
welcome.  Talks will be delivered in English or French.

Submission guidelines
1) An anonymous abstract (in English or French) of less than 1000
words (excluding bibliographical references). The abstract (including
references) must fit on 2 pages in A4 format using a Times 12 font (or
US letter format if A4 is unavailable). The abstract must clearly
specify the subject that you will be addressing as well as your main
conclusions. References must be made to previous work on the subject
and the crucial data on which your conclusions are based must be
mentioned.
2) On a separate page, you should mention your name, first name,
affiliation, mailing address, academic status and the title of your
paper.
Submissions should be sent by electronic mail to
deverbalnouns at univ-lille3.fr, preferably in .pdf format (or .rtf or
.doc if .pdf is unavailable). Please be sure to send the page with the
personal data as a separate attached document from the
abstract. Please call the file with the personal data name.perso.pdf
and the one with the abstract name.abstract.doc (where ''name'' is the
name of the author or of the contact person in the case of multiple
authors). Abstracts must be received before February 15 2004.
(Abstract submission is limited to one abstract as single author and
one as a co-author.)

If you cannot submit your abstract electronically, you can send 2
paper copies of the abstract and the page with personal information to
the following address, making sure that it arrives on 15 February at
the latest.

Colloque déverbaux
UMR 8528 « SILEX »
Université de Lille 3
BP 149
F-59653 VILLENEUVE D'ASCQ CEDEX

Information about the conference (fees, registration form,
accommodation, transportation, ...) will be kept up to date on:
http://www.univ-lille3.fr/silex/Deverbalnouns/deverbalnouns_index.htm

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