Generative Linguistics in the Old World 36, April 2-6, 2013
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/glow-36/ - 2025-11-25
Filtyp
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/glow-36/ - 2025-11-25
Microsoft PowerPoint - Hugdahl_Lund 08.ppt Speech perception and brain function: Experimental and clinical studies Kenneth Hugdahl Dept Biological and Medical Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway and Division of Psychiatry, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen Martin N = 651 N = 651 Histogram (NF_FR_FL bare_voksne.sta 34v*651c) -18 -11 -8 -5 -2 1 4 7 10 13 16 20 30 DIFF NF (RE-LE) 0 10 20 30
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_BrainTalk/Hugdahl.pdf - 2025-11-24
GLOWKeynote Constraining Local Dislocation dialect-geographically Gertjan Postma Meertens Instituut Amsterdam gertjan.postma@meertens.knaw.nl GLOW-36, Lund, 3-5 April 2013 V-T-AGR versus V-AGR-T in Dutch dialects 1 Structure • The problem: order reversal - syntax or postsyntax? • The role of dialectology • Deviant structures V-pron-T and V-AGR-T in Dutch • A fundamental isogloss cuts the Dutch dia
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_glow36/Handouts_and_Presentations/Postma.pdf - 2025-11-24
Microsoft Word - GLOW2012_nov14_thmy.docx Parasitic Gaps Licensed by Elided Syntactic Structure Masaya Yoshida, Tim Hunter, & Michael Frazier 1. Introduction: As is well-known, the licensing condition on Parasitic Gaps (PGs) crucially refers to a specific syntactic configuration: a PG is licensed by a gap left by an overt A-bar movement which does not c-command the PG ([1]). An interesting consequ
Dinka and the architecture of long-distance extraction∗ Coppe van Urk (cvanurk@mit.edu) Norvin Richards (norvin@mit.edu) Massachusetts Institute of Technology GLOW 36, Lund University In the Nilotic language Dinka Nyarweng, both C and v have the EPP property: one XP must sit in their specifier (1) and (2): (1) CP XP C’ C TP . . . (2) vP XP v’ v VP . . . In this talk, we show that this system provi
1 The Grammar of the Possession Link: Modern Hebrew yeS Constructions: Nora Boneh, Universit de Paris III Possessive constructions across languages make use either of HAVE or BE as the possession link. With the first, the possessor surfaces with Nominative case while the possessum bears Accusative case, with the second the possessor receives Dative case from the preposition accompanying BE, and th
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_console9_2000/Abstracts/Boneh.pdf - 2025-11-24
Slide 1 The 12th International Symposium on Iconicity in Literature and Language Lund University, Sweden 5th May 2019 The diachronic stability of Japanese ideophones and the iconicity- systematicity relationship f Bonnie McLean Masters student Australian National University Iconicity and Systematicity • The focus of research into ideophones or iconic words has largely been on their iconicity. • Ho
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/conference/ill-12/McLean_IIL-12.pdf - 2025-11-24
References colloquium References Bergström, D., Norberg, C., & Nordlund, M. (2022). “Words are picked up along the way” – Swedish EFL teachers’ conceptualizations of vocabulary knowledge and learning. Language Awareness, 31(4), 393–409. https://doi.org/10.1080/09658416.2021.1893326 Bland, J. (2022). Compelling stories for English language learners: Creativity, interculturality and critical literac
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/conference/NFES-25/References_colloquium.pdf - 2025-11-24
1 Visser’s Generalization and the c-command condition on Control Jacek Witkoś (wjacek@amu.edu.pl) & Sylwiusz Żychliński (sylwiusz@amu.edu.pl) 1. Introduction The major focus of this presentation is Visser’s Generalization (Visser 1973), an observation that holds of very similar terminal strings in (1a-b), where the passive transformation is compatible with an Object Control predicate (cf. 2b) but
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_glow36/Handouts_and_Presentations/Witkos.pdf - 2025-11-24
Damsgård_etal The 2nd EuroSoTL conference, June 8-9 2017, Lund, Sweden Are learning outcomes affected by course intensity and workload? B. Damsgård, E. Strømseng & Ø. Varpe The University Centre in Svalbard (UNIS), P.O. Box 156, 9171 Longyearbyen, Norway ABSTRACT: University courses may be organized as parallel semester courses, or as sequential intensive courses ranging from a few weeks to severa
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/Damsga__rd_etal.pdf - 2025-11-24
Iconicitypresentation no video Depictions and rehearsal Agnes Löfgren Emily Hofstetter Nonlexicalvocalizations.com Rehearsals as depictions • Rehearsals enact future activity • Implies depiction of future • But also ’trying out’ activities that could be, but then are not, enacted • Plus depictions used in course of ’doing rehearsal’ that are not depictions of final product • How are rehearsal depi
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/conference/ill-12/Lo__fgren_and_Hofstetter_ILL-12.pdf - 2025-11-24
Microsoft Word - EngNorw_biling.docx Cross-linguistic influence and structural overlap affecting English verb placement It is well-known that although bilingual children clearly separate their languages from very early on (cf. e.g. Genesee 1989, Meisel 1989), cross-linguistic influence between the child’s languages is a fairly common phenomenon. Various proposals have been put forward to account f
Accent reduction in two dialects of Japanese Phonetic manifestation of word accents in sentence perspetive -a comparison of Tokyo and Kochi Japanese Yasuko Nagano-Madsen Dept. Of Oriental & African Languages, Göteborg University Accent is weakened *in the following cases (for text reading and for learners of Japanese) *appears at the reduced pitch register/downstep, catathesis from Kori (1997:189)
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/conference/waatisp/presentations/madsen/lund-presentation.ppt - 2025-11-24