36.950, FYI: Data in Historical Linguistics seminar: Quantitative methods on small corpora for historical sociolinguistics: a case study of Old French fabliaux

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Wed Mar 19 01:05:04 UTC 2025


LINGUIST List: Vol-36-950. Wed Mar 19 2025. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 36.950, FYI: Data in Historical Linguistics seminar: Quantitative methods on small corpora for historical sociolinguistics: a case study of Old French fabliaux

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Date: 18-Mar-2025
From: Mathilde Bru [mathilde.1.bru at kcl.ac.uk]
Subject: Data in Historical Linguistics seminar: Quantitative methods on small corpora for historical sociolinguistics: a case study of Old French fabliaux


The sixth talk of the Data in Historical Linguistics Seminar Series
2025 will take place remotely on Monday 31st March 2025 at 5pm BST.
Zinaida Geylikman (Université Paris Cité) will present on
‘Quantitative methods on small corpora for historical
sociolinguistics: a case study of Old French fabliaux.’
Registration for this talk will close at midnight on Friday 28th March
and the link for this can be accessed here:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSciGltVD7ft6dgyMu45DrYbEB0WyJ67RyURLDHfaTI7njv0bw/viewform
Participants will receive a Microsoft Teams link via email on the
morning of the talk.
The abstract for this talk can be found here:
https://datainhistoricallinguistics.wordpress.com/2024/12/31/geylikman/
The programme and registration links for all talks in the series can
be found on our website:
https://datainhistoricallinguistics.wordpress.com/2025-programme/
This seminar series is run by Andrea Farina and Mathilde Bru (King’s
College London) and is aimed at PhD students and early career
researchers. The purpose of this seminar series is to bring together
researchers working on historical linguistics with a quantitative
approach, and to discuss current avenues of research in this topic. We
hope that these seminars will nurture international collaboration and
establish academic ties among researchers working on similar topics in
this field.
Join our mailing list!

Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics




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