33.3786, Confs: English; Historical Linguistics/France
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LINGUIST List: Vol-33-3786. Sat Dec 10 2022. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 33.3786, Confs: English; Historical Linguistics/France
Moderators:
Editor for this issue: Everett Green <everett at linguistlist.org>
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Date: Sat, 10 Dec 2022 06:17:42
From: BRIAN LOWREY [brian.lowrey at u-picardie.fr]
Subject: Colloque Bisannuel de la Diachronie de l'Anglais - 7
Colloque Bisannuel de la Diachronie de l'Anglais - 7
Short Title: CBDA-7
Date: 13-Jan-2023 - 27-Jan-2023
Location: Virtual, France
Contact: Elise Louviot
Contact Email: elise.louviot at univ-reims.fr
Meeting URL: http://www.cbdaconference.org/
Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics
Subject Language(s): English (eng)
Meeting Description:
The Colloque Bisannuel de la Diachronie de l’Anglais (CBDA) is a regular
conference that takes place every other year (usually in summer) in France,
devoted to the diachrony of English at all stages of its development and to
theoretical questions in the field of historical linguistics. After a hiatus
caused by the Covid pandemic, we plan to organise the next edition, the
seventh in the series, in January 2023.
Given the still uncertain sanitary context, CBDA-7 will take the form of an
online symposium, spread over three non-consecutive days in January 2023
(Friday 13th, 20th and 27th).
Registration and conference fee
There will be no registration fee. Participation is free. However,
participants will be required to register. Registration information to follow
on the conference website.
Website
http://www.cbdaconference.org/
Program:
The seventh edition of the ‘Colloque Bisannuel sur la Diachronie de l’Anglais’
(CBDA-7)), dedicated to historical linguistics and the history and development
of English, will take the form of an on-line event, over three days in January
2023. Access is free via the links given below. We look forward to seeing you
online in January !
PROGRAMME CBDA-7 (13th / 20th / 27th January 2023)
All times refer to Paris time
More information available at : http://www.cbdaconference.org/
FRIDAY JANUARY 13th
11:30 – 12:30
First Xavier Dekeyser Memorial Lecture: Ayumi Miura (Osaka University, keynote
speaker)
Lexical semantics of impersonal constructions: diachronic relation to loving
and hating
LUNCH BREAK
13:30 – 14:00 Jacob Runner (Kanazawa University)
Runes and Latin: the significance of early medieval English multiple script
usage
14:00 – 14:30 Chris Smith (Université de Caen)
Exploring diachronic competition between Vable and Vsome adjectives
COFFEE BREAK
15:00 – 15h30 Natasha Stojanovska-Ilievska (Ss. Cyril and Methodius
University, Skopje)
Shifting grammatical conventions: the case of singular 'they’
15:30 – 16:00 Mael Farina (Université de Caen)
Using the Oxford English Dictionary in combination with corpus analysis via
sketch engine to inquire into phonesthemes: a case study of gr- words
Zoom link for the 1st session :
https://univ-reims-fr.zoom.us/j/93525406609?pwd=cXZnVTNwWXI4TU9tbTVodjhZZlJBZz
099
FRIDAY JANUARY 20th
13:00 – 13:30 Nicolas Vodé (Université de la Sorbonne)
‘Herien,' 'loven,' 'preisen': semantic competition in the Middle English
religious lexicon
13:30 – 14:00 Marina Asián (University of Almería)
Norse-derived terms in the Middle English lexis: an etymological study of
Havelok the Dane and The Canterbury Tales
14:00 – 14:30 Sara Pons Sanz (Cardiff University)
A Re-evaluation of the Norse-derived terms in the Ormulum on the basis of the
Gersum typology
COFFEE BREAK
15:00 – 15h30 Sylvie Hancil (Université de Rouen)
To what extent can aspect be modal? The case study of the be + -ing form
15:30 – 16:00 Virginia Meirelles (Universidade de Brasilia)
Rhotic and non-rhotic English in the post-independence United States
Zoom link for the 2nd session :
https://univ-reims-fr.zoom.us/j/99569516277?pwd=Z2tUMSs0dzBQc1FGYnNUaWxQcm9zdz
09
FRIDAY JANUARY 27th
13:00 – 13:30 Jerzy Nykiel (University of Bergen) and Reijirou Shibasaki
(Meiji University)
On the rise and fall of '(it/there) is no nay in the history of English’
13:30 – 14:00 Baptiste Verly (ISIT Paris Panthéon-Assas Université)
The possible influence of Latin on the development of the “accusative and
infinitive” construction from Old English to Present-Day English
14:00 – 14:30 Dan Morris (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
Register and the development of comparative and superlative alternation in
historical English
COFFEE BREAK
15:00 – 15h30 Juliane Elter-Wiebke (University of Mannheim)
Loan verbs strengthening existing argument structural patterns
15:30 – 16:00 Charles-Henri Discry (independent researcher)
A Comparative study of 'ger' causative structures
Zoom link for the 3rd session :
https://univ-reims-fr.zoom.us/j/98350201054?pwd=aEdmSjZIVWx2VDhEaGRQb1hHL0h2Zz
09
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