29.4927, Calls: Gen Ling, Lang Acquisition, Lang Doc, Socioling, Text/Corpus Ling/Portugal
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LINGUIST List: Vol-29-4927. Tue Dec 11 2018. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 29.4927, Calls: Gen Ling, Lang Acquisition, Lang Doc, Socioling, Text/Corpus Ling/Portugal
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Date: Tue, 11 Dec 2018 23:40:24
From: Nélia Alexandre [n_alexandre at letras.ulisboa.pt]
Subject: 19th ACBLPE Annual Conference
Full Title: 19th ACBLPE Annual Conference
Date: 17-Jun-2019 - 19-Jun-2019
Location: Lisbon, Portugal
Contact Person: Nélia Alexandre
Meeting Email: acblpe2019 at gmail.com
Web Site: https://sites.google.com/campus.ul.pt/acblpespcl2019/
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics; Language Acquisition; Language Documentation; Sociolinguistics; Text/Corpus Linguistics
Call Deadline: 07-Jan-2019
Meeting Description:
The 19th annual conference of the Association of Portuguese and
Spanish-Lexified Creoles dedicated to the study of the Iberian-lexified creole
languages and their communities.
Call for Papers:
Abstracts in any area of language contact involving Spanish and/or Portuguese
are invited.
A. Abstract: electronic format
1. Authors must carefully follow the directions concerning the organization of
the abstract, detailed in section B below.
2. The abstract (including examples) must not exceed 400 words (excluding
title and references). Please note the word count at the bottom of the
abstract.
3. The abstract should be sent via EasyAbs
(http://linguistlist.org/easyabs/acblpe2019) in PDF (or DOC ) format.
4. At the top of the abstract, outside the typing area, put the title.
B. Organization of the abstract
Many abstracts are rejected because they omit crucial information rather than
because of errors in what they include. A suggested outline for abstracts is
as follows:
1. Choose a title that clearly indicates the topic of the paper and is no more
than one line long.
2. In the abstract, state the topic clearly.
3. Make reference to prior work on the topic.
4. When essential to the clarity of the argumentation, present linguistic data
(with glosses). Explain abbreviations at their first occurrence.
5. If the paper presents the results of experiments, but collection of results
is not yet complete, present the provisional results in detail. Also indicate
the nature of the experimental design and the specific hypothesis tested.
6. State the relevance of your hypothesis to past work. Describe the analysis
in as much detail as possible. Avoid vague or unsubstantiated statements.
7. State the contribution to linguistic research made by the analysis.
8. Citation of the relevant literature is essential within the abstract.
However, the inclusion of a list of references at the end of the abstract is
not obligatory.
Abstracts will be assessed on the basis of the following three criteria:
1. The relevance and significance of the proposed topic and/or the originality
of the study.
2. The argumentation (including the clarity of the argument and the
results/conclusions).
3. Knowledge of the relevant research literature and theory.
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