Morphology

AFLA XVII: Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association XVII

05/07/2010 - 8:00am
05/09/2010 - 5:00pm
Etc/GMT-5

The Department of Linguistics at Stony Brook University, Stony Brook NY, will host the 17th annual meeting of the Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association. The conference dates are May 7-9, 2010.

For further information, call for papers, and abstract submission system, please visit AFLA XVII website at http://www.afla17.org.

To contact the organizers, please direct your emails to afla17@afla17.org.

Stela Manova

02/04/2009 - 12:50pm
02/04/2009 - 1:50pm
Etc/GMT-5

Affix order in the Slavic word: Parsability, closing suffixes and related issues

Greville Corbett

03/27/2009 - 3:30pm
03/27/2009 - 5:00pm
Etc/GMT-5

Eulàlia Bonet

03/26/2008 - 12:45pm
03/26/2008 - 3:45pm
Etc/GMT-5

“Phonology-morphology-syntax interactions in plural formation in Catalan”

Linguistics Seminar Room (SBS S207).

Zheng Xu

Inflectional Morphology in Optimality Theory

David Embick

12/01/2006 - 3:30pm
12/01/2006 - 5:00pm
Etc/GMT-5

Morphology. From University of Pennsylvania.

Words are not better than phrases

8th Annual SUNY/CUNY/NYU Mini Conference

11/18/2006 - 9:30am
11/18/2006 - 6:00pm
Etc/GMT-5

The 8th SUNY/CUNY/NYU Mini Conference
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Student Activities Center - SAC Room 302

Please check the campus map for directions to the SAC.

Saturday, November 18th, 2006

Mark Baker

09/28/2007 - 3:30pm
09/28/2007 - 5:00pm
Etc/GMT-5

Syntax. Rutgers University.

Parameters of Agreement, Non-Parameters of Case

Download the abstract below.

Mark J. Volpe

Japanese Morphology and its theoretical consequences: Derivational morphology in Distributed Morphology

Edith Aldridge

04/20/2007 - 3:30pm
04/20/2007 - 5:00pm
Etc/GMT-5

Syntax. From Northwestern University. Location: SAC 311.

Wh-questions in the Pseudo-Chinese of Old Japanese

In this talk, I use data from the 8th century texts Kojiki and Manyoshu to argue that old Japanese had short wh-movement to a clause-internal focus position. This proposal stands in contrast to earlier claims made by Akira Watanabe that this movement targeted a position in the C domain. Additionally, I hope to show that the pseudo-Chinese language of the Kojiki can in fact be used in an analysis of Japanese syntax.

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