Phonology Seminar Fall 2023 – Ferhat Karaman
2122 Campbell HallFerhat Karaman, reporting an experimental study of Turkish vowel harmony To ask to give a seminar, please contact the Fall Quarter convenor, Bruce Hayes, at bhayes@humnet.ucla.edu.
Psycholinguistics/Computational Linguistics Seminar – Yang Wang
2122 Campbell HallTime: 4-6pm Location: Campbell 2122.
Faculty Meeting
2122 Campbell HallColloquium Talk – Alexis Wellwood: Temporal constitution in language and mind
Location - Dodd 146 Temporal constitution in language and mind Semanticists posit at least two categories of dynamic entity—event and process—in their explanations of the semantic properties of different classes of verbs and verb phrases. I consider the event-process distinction as a case study in the interface between linguistic and extralinguistic cognition. In a series...
Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Edward Keenan
2122 Campbell HallMeet Tuesdays 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM on Zoom, but you can also hybridize with Professor Munro in person in the 2122A Conference Room each week - just bring your laptop.
Faculty Meeting
2122 Campbell Hall2122 Campbell Hall
Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Travis Major (USC)
2122 Campbell HallMeet Tuesdays 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM on Zoom, but you can also hybridize with Professor Munro in person in the 2122A Conference Room each week - just bring your laptop.
Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Pamela Munro
2122 Campbell HallMeet Tuesdays 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM on Zoom, but you can also hybridize with Professor Munro in person in the 2122A Conference Room each week - just bring your laptop.
Phonology Seminar – Black Lehman
2122 Campbell HallPhonology and morphology in Avatime, Dschang, and Hän (practice job talk) Zoom link: https://ucla.zoom.us/j/91545617700 If you would like to schedule a presentation, please email Ben Eischens (beischens@ucla.edu).
Colloquium Talk – Jonah Katz: Prosodic structure, timing, and fortition-lenition patterns
Location - Royce Hall 362 Title: Prosodic structure, timing, and fortition-lenition patterns Abstract: This talk reviews cross-linguistic evidence that certain common lenition processes such as spirantization, intervocalic voicing, and flapping take place in a component of grammar that governs the fine-grained temporal dynamics of speech sounds and their interaction with prosodic structure. I argue that...