27.4756, Calls: Gen Ling, Morphology, Semantics, Syntax/Switzerland
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LINGUIST List: Vol-27-4756. Fri Nov 18 2016. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 27.4756, Calls: Gen Ling, Morphology, Semantics, Syntax/Switzerland
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Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 14:44:11
From: Berit Gehrke [berit.gehrke at linguist.univ-paris-diderot.fr]
Subject: Participles: Form, Use and Meaning
Full Title: Participles: Form, Use and Meaning
Short Title: PartFUM
Date: 10-Sep-2017 - 13-Sep-2017
Location: Zurich, Switzerland
Contact Person: Olga Borik
Meeting Email: olga.borik at gmail.com, erdbeerita at gmail.com
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics; Morphology; Semantics; Syntax
Call Deadline: 20-Nov-2016
Meeting Description:
This workshop is dedicated to the form, meaning and use of all types of
participles (labeled with different combinations of present, past, perfect,
active, passive, imperfective, perfective, etc.), also including adverbial
participles/converbs (e.g. deepričastija in Russian), both from a synchronic
and a diachronic perspective. While considerable attention in the recent
literature has been paid to the use and meaning of past/passive participles
(cf. Rapp 1997, Kratzer 2000, Anagnostopoulou 2003, Embick 2004, Maienborn
2007, Alexiadou & Anagnostopoulou 2008, McIntyre 2013, Gehrke 2012, 2015, and
many others) the other participle classes have not attracted that much
attention. We aim at bridging this gap by expanding the workshop theme to all
possible classes of participles, ultimately in the search for an answer to a
fundamental question of what is the proper characterization of participles in
general. Traditionally, participles are often treated as a hybrid of a verb
and an adjective. This simple characterization already raises several
important issues:
- What is ‘adjectival’ and what is ‘verbal’ in the grammatical makeup of
participles? Do these ‘verbal’ and ‘adjectival’ properties characterize a
participle itself or are they (partially) conditioned by the context in which
a participle appears?
- Can participles in predicative position be verbal or adjectival, but those
in attributive position only adjectival, or can attributive participles also
be reduced relatives of verbal constructions involving participles?
- What about participles that are used in periphrastic verb forms (e.g. verbal
passive, perfect, progressive), do they retain adjectival properties? Is there
a possible diachronic perspective, in the sense that the combination of
be/have with a (possibly adjectival) participle developed into a periphrastic
verbal form?
Further questions we are interested in include the following:
- How many classes of participles do we need to distinguish? Is there strong
independent evidence that we need more than one class of, for instance,
passive participles, as suggested in Parsons (1990), Embick (2004), Kratzer
(2000)? Why, though, do those participles still fall under the same label?
What is the defining property?
- What are the grammatical categories that participles express? Do the terms
past/present, perfective/imperfective etc. in the characterization of a
participle convey the same meaning as in verbs?
- What are the exact formal (semantic, morphological etc.) restrictions on the
formation of a particular type of participle, as well as on the use of such a
participle (e.g. as adjectival/verbal participle, passive, progressive,
perfect, etc.)? In particular, it has been claimed that adjectival participles
can only be formed on the basis of verbs that have a state component in their
meaning (for passive participles, see, e.g., Rapp 1997, Gehrke 2015), that
only perfective participles can be used in ‘proper’ periphrastic passives in
Russian (Schoorlemmer 1995, Paslawska & von Stechow 2003), that complex
relationships hold between related categories of resultativity, passive and
perfect in various languages (cf. Nedjalkov 1988). The restrictions have
mostly been stated for the passive participles, but are there restrictions on
other classes of participles and how can they be explained from a theoretical
perspective?
Organizers:
Olga Borik (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
Berit Gehrke (CNRS-LLF / Paris Diderot)
2nd Call for Papers:
We invite submissions of preliminary abstracts of 300 words (for 20 minute
presentations with 10 minutes for discussion) that address any of the topics
in the meeting description or related questions. Abstracts in pdf format
should be sent to both of the following addresses:
olga.borik at gmail.com
erdbeerita at gmail.com
Please submit your abstracts by 20 November 2016.
If the workshop proposal is accepted, all preliminary workshop participants
will be invited to submit the full versions of their abstracts to the general
call for papers. Final abstracts of max 500 words (excluding references)
should be resubmitted to the SLE organizing committee before 15 January 2017.
Important Dates:
20 November 2016: Deadline for submission of 300-word abstracts (excluding
references) to the workshop organizers
25 November 2016: Notification of acceptance by the workshop organizers and
submission of the workshop proposal to SLE
15 December 2016: Notification of acceptance of workshop proposals from SLE
organizers to workshop organizers
15 January 2017: Submission of full abstracts (500 words, excluding
references), taking into account any feedback from the reviewing procedure,
for review by SLE
31 March 2017: Notification of acceptance of individual workshop contributions
10-13 September 2017: SLE conference
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