Calendar of Events
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Colloquium Talk – Sam Zukoff: Morpheme Ordering Happens in the Phonology
Colloquium Talk – Sam Zukoff: Morpheme Ordering Happens in the Phonology
Location - Math and Science 5200 Title: Morpheme Ordering Happens in the Phonology Abstract: The determination of the order of morphemes within words has traditionally been modeled using cyclic concatenation, the one-by-one attachment of affixal morphemes to the root, guided by morphosyntactic constituency via the “Mirror Principle” (Baker 1985). In this talk, I propose an alternative,...
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Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Iara Mantenuto (CSUDH)
Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Iara Mantenuto (CSUDH)
Meet 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.
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Phonology Seminar – Kie Zuraw & Paolo Roca
Phonology Seminar – Kie Zuraw & Paolo Roca
Filipino word prosody: Evidence from textsetting If you would like to schedule a presentation, please email Ben Eischens (beischens@ucla.edu).
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Colloquium Talk – Connor Mayer: Are scalar models of sonority enough? Insights from L2 acquisition of English complex onsets
Colloquium Talk – Connor Mayer: Are scalar models of sonority enough? Insights from L2 acquisition of English complex onsets
Languages vary in their phonotactics: how sounds are allowed to be sequenced into words. For example, although English, Spanish, and Farsi all have the sounds /p l s/, English allows the complex onsets /sp/ and /pl/, as in ‘speech’ and ‘play’, Spanish only /pl/, as in ‘playa’, while Farsi allows no complex onsets at all....
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Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Nothing to Wear Fest
Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Nothing to Wear Fest
Meet 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.
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Hendrik Kim Dissertation Defense
Hendrik Kim Dissertation Defense
The syntax of negation in Korean given an antisymmetric and cartographic frameworkIn this talk, I will reassess the syntax of preverbal and postverbal negation by taking into consideration a framework which is based on the antisymmetry theory (Kayne 1994) in conjunction with the cartographic program (Cinque 1999), building on the works by Koopman & Szabolcsi...
Phonology Seminar – Journal Club
Phonology Seminar – Journal Club
(May be moved to Week 6) If you would like to schedule a presentation, please email Ben Eischens (beischens@ucla.edu).
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Colloquium Talk – Shengyun Gu: When the phonological mind meets another modality: Two-handed articulation in Shanghai Sign Language ” (See below for abstract)
Colloquium Talk – Shengyun Gu: When the phonological mind meets another modality: Two-handed articulation in Shanghai Sign Language ” (See below for abstract)
Location - Royce Hall 362 The department tour slot is still open. You can sign up here (same link). When the phonological mind meets another modality: Two-handed articulation in Shanghai Sign Language Abstract: To what extent are the phonological systems of languages, spoken or signed, structured similarly if we assume that they both draw on...
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Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Colin Brown
Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Colin Brown
Meet 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.
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Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Guy Carden (UBC)
Winter 2024 American Indian Seminar – Guy Carden (UBC)
Meet 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.
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Colloquium Talk – Viola Schmitt: Distributivity is Complex
Colloquium Talk – Viola Schmitt: Distributivity is Complex
In this talk I show (based on joint cross-linguistic work with various collaborators) that distributive -- i.e., `classical' -- meanings for the universal part of the language (connectives and DP-internal quantifiers) correspond to bigger morpho-syntactic structures while the corresponding smaller structures have a weak (plural) meaning. This, I will argue, raises a problem for a...
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Colloquium Talk – Amy Rose Deal
Colloquium Talk – Amy Rose Deal
Dependent case by Agree: Ergative in Shawi (joint work with Emily Clem, UCSD)Ergative and accusative behave as dependent cases insofar as their appearance on a nominal depends on the presence of another nominal in the same domain. Recent work on case theory has taken the phenomenon of case dependency to challenge the idea that case is...