18.1826, Calls: Morphology,Semantics,Syntax/Canada; Historical Ling/Austria

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LINGUIST List: Vol-18-1826. Sun Jun 17 2007. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 18.1826, Calls: Morphology,Semantics,Syntax/Canada; Historical Ling/Austria

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            Helen Aristar-Dry, Eastern Michigan U <hdry at linguistlist.org>
 
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       <reviews at linguistlist.org> 

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1)
Date: 14-Jun-2007
From: Eric Mathieu < nels38 at uottawa.ca >
Subject: 38th Meeting of the North East Linguistic Society 

2)
Date: 14-Jun-2007
From: Renata Szczepaniak < rszczepa at uni-mainz.de >
Subject: Linking Elements - Origin, Change, Functionalization

 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Sun, 17 Jun 2007 14:18:25
From: Eric Mathieu < nels38 at uottawa.ca >
Subject: 38th Meeting of the North East Linguistic Society 
 

Full Title: 38th Meeting of the North East Linguistic Society 
Short Title: NELS 38 

Date: 26-Oct-2007 - 28-Oct-2007
Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 
Contact Person: Eric Mathieu
Meeting Email: nels38 at uottawa.ca

Linguistic Field(s): Morphology; Phonology; Semantics; Syntax 

Call Deadline: 09-Jul-2007 

Meeting Description

The 38th Meeting of the North East Linguistic Society 

38th Meeting of the North East Linguistic Society (NELS 38)

Second call for papers

Please check the website, it contains updated information:

http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~nels38/

Invited speakers:

Gennaro Chierchia (Harvard University) 
Rose-Marie Déchaine (University of British Columbia) 
Bruce Hayes (University of California, Los Angeles) 
Irene Heim (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) 

Guidelines

Abstracts are invited for 20-minute talks (plus 10 minutes of discussion), and a
poster session, on any aspect of theoretical linguistics. Submissions are
limited to one individual and one joint abstract per author. Abstracts are also
invited for 20-minute talks (plus 10 minutes of discussion) for the workshop on
Phonology and the workshop on Semantics (see website for description).

Abstract submissions should be sent to nels38 at uottawa.ca 

When submitting your abstract, please specify the sessions you would like to be
considered for: Main, Poster, or one of the two special sessions.

Abstracts should take the form of a PDF document, should be anonymous, and
limited to one page (using 1'' margins on all sides and 11pt font size) and a
second page containing examples and references. Any non-standard fonts should be
embedded in the PDF document.

Submission deadline: July 9, 2007
Notification of Acceptance: August 15, 2007
Notifications of acceptance will be sent on August 15, 2007. All other authors
will be contacted by August 27, 2007

Conference dates: October 26-28, 2007

Student organizing committee: Galina Dukova-Zheleva, Dana Geber, Fatima
Hamlaoui, Keren Tonciulescu.



	
-------------------------Message 2 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Sun, 17 Jun 2007 14:19:09
From: Renata Szczepaniak < rszczepa at uni-mainz.de >
Subject: Linking Elements - Origin, Change, Functionalization 

	

Full Title: Linking Elements - Origin, Change, Functionalization 
Short Title: Workshop at the 13 IMM 

Date: 03-Feb-2008 - 06-Feb-2008
Location: Vienna, Austria 
Contact Person: Renata Szczepaniak
Meeting Email: rszczepa at uni-mainz.de

Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics 

Call Deadline: 17-Sep-2007 

Meeting Description:
Workshop at the 13th International Morphology Meeting, February 2008, Vienna,
Austria 

New lexical concepts can be expressed through the combination of two or more
existing free lexical morphemes. These can be combined in (more or less complex)
phrases as well as compounds, cf. New High German Geodätisches Institut
'institute of geod-esy' (NP) vs. Wirtschaft-s-institut 'institute of economy'
(compound). Language his-tory reveals that the borders between these two
mechanisms are not clear-cut. In contrast, they can be crossed diachronically:
Syntactic nominal phrases like Early New High German des teuffels list can turn
into morphological compound structures, cf. New High German Teufelslist 'cunning
of the devil', which gain productivity as a morphological mechanism. 

We propose a workshop addressing questions on the internal structures of
compounds and constructions in an intermediary state between syntax and
morphology (cf. French chemin-de-fer ''way-of-iron'' 'railway' or Icelandic
vél-ar-hlóð 'machine sound'). The focus is set on elements which originally
serve to express syntactic relations (cf. in-flectional affixes, prepositions
etc.) and develop as 'linking elements', cf. the linking -s in Teufel-s-list in
the joint position between the parts of compounds.

We would like to invite research presentations on the origin, change, and
functionalization of linking elements in different languages. Although all work
on linking elements is of high interest, we would especially want to stress the
importance of diachronic and contrastive studies. Some of the questions to be
addressed are listed in the following:
- What linguistic material develops as linking elements?
- Which morpho-syntactic categories have retained their meaning and which have
abandoned it (cf. e.g. former number- vs. case-affixes)?
- Can functionalization in morphology, semantics, or phonology be taken into
account? Which functions do linking elements develop? Is there a correlation
between productivity and functionalization?
- How are linking elements connected to language processing?
- What has led to the loss of productive linking elements, cf. the history of
English?
- Which factors condition productivity and changes in productivity for linking
elements? How many productive linking elements do languages keep, and are
unproductive elements substituted by productive ones?
- Is the productitity of linking elements connected with the producitivity of
compounding (cf. the high productivity of compounding and the use of linking
elements in languages like German and Danish vs. the low productivity of
compounding and little use of linking elements in English or Polish)?
- Is there a difference between origin and functionalization of linking elements
in right-headed vs. left-headed compounds?
- What influence does the token frequency of the first or second part of a
com-pound have on the appearance of linking elements?
- What is the grammatical status of linking elements?
- What differences can be accounted for between written and spoken language?

Abstract submission:
Please send an anonymous abstract of max. 500 words (20-minute talks with
10-minute discussion) in both .pdf and .doc formats to rszczepa at uni-mainz.de. 

Notification: October 31, 2007

Organizers:
Sebastian Kürschner, University of Groningen
Renata Szczepaniak, University of Mainz




 




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