We are saddened to report that former Linguistics Undergraduate Advisor, Esther Weiss, passed away on Thursday, November 19, after suffering a stroke earlier this week. Esther, who retired in 2006 after 22 years at the University of California, working at three different campuses (UCSB, UCSF, and Berkeley), will be fondly remembered by those who worked with her and the many undergraduate students whom she advised.
November 19, 2020
November 17, 2020
Congratulations to Justin Davidson, whose article "Asymmetry and Directionality in Catalan-Spanish Contact: Intervocalic Fricatives in Barcelona and Valencia" has just appeared in the open-access journal Languages.
November 16, 2020
Here's the latest from the Survey of California and Other Indian Languages:
- We've catalogued new paper materials related to Q'anjob'al (Mayan; Guatemala, Mexico; item 2016-01.048 and above) that derive from the department's 1986-1987 field methods course, with speaker Rafael Pascual and instructor Leanne Hinton. The course was followed by an undergraduate course on K'iche' (Linguistics 175) in fall 1987, and a combined undergraduate-graduate seminar (Linguistics 198/298) on Mayan languages in spring 1988, both taught by Prof. Hinton.
November 13, 2020
In and around the linguistics department in the next week:
- Memorial for Gary Holland - Sunday Nov 15 - Zoom - 11am-2pm
Click here to register. The Zoom room opens at 10:45am. - Fieldwork Forum - Wednesday Nov 18 - Zoom - 3:10-4pm
Lisa Matthewson (University of British Columbia): How experimental should we be? - Phorum - Friday Nov 13 - Zoom - 3-4pm
Chantal Gratton (Stanford): The vowel space as an interactional and affective resource.
Email Anna Björklund or Dakota Robinson for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the mailing list. - Phorum - Friday Nov 20 - Zoom - 3-4pm
Claudia Valdivia, Alex Aabedi, and Ben Lipkin (UCSF Brain Tumor Center): Convergence of cross-modal lexical retrieval in the lateral prefrontal cortex.
Email Anna Björklund or Dakota Robinson for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the mailing list. - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Nov 13 - Zoom - 3-4:30pm
Justin Royer (McGill): Binding and coreference in Mayan: Evidence for object raising. - Zoom Phonology - Thursday Nov 19 - Zoom - 9-10am
Laura Downing (University of Gothenburg): Testing typologies of laryngeal contrasts in stop inventories: The view from Africa.
For the Zoom link or to be added to the Zoom Phonology Mailing List, contact karee_garvin@berkeley.edu
November 9, 2020
A Zoom memorial event for Gary Holland will be held 11-2 (Pacific time) on Sunday, November 15. Department community members are welcome. To attend, you need to register in advance here. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting; the room will open at 10:45.
November 6, 2020
In and around the linguistics department in the next week:
- Linguistics Department Colloquium - Monday Nov 9 - Zoom - 3:10-5pm
David Goldstein (UCLA): Correlated grammaticalization: The rise of articles in Indo-European. - Fieldwork Forum - Wednesday Nov 11 - Zoom - 3:10-4pm
Katie Sardinha (Independent Scholar): A fieldworker’s reflection on the psycholinguistics of language and aging. - Language Variation and Change Working Group - Tuesday Nov 10 - Zoom - 3-4pm
Discussion of Cheshire 2019. Please email Annie Helms for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the bCourses site. -
Phorum - Friday Nov 13 - Zoom - 3-4pm
Chantal Gratton (Stanford): TBA.
Email Anna Björklund or Dakota Robinson for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the mailing list. - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Nov 13 - Zoom - 3-4:30pm
Justin Royer (McGill): Binding and coreference in Mayan: Evidence for object raising. - Zoom Phonology - Thursday Nov 12 - Zoom - 9-10am
Chris Green (Syracuse): On the tonal system of Mbat (Jarawan).
For the Zoom link or to be added to the Zoom Phonology Mailing List, contact karee_garvin@berkeley.edu
November 5, 2020
Congrats to Ruth Rouvier, whose paper "Emotion and Motivation in Language Reclamation" has been accepted for presentation at the 7th International Conference on Language Documentation and Conservation (ICLDC) and selected for a Most Impactful Paper Award, which comes with a cash prize. The conference will be held virtually March 4-7, 2021.
November 4, 2020
Gašper Beguš will be speaking at the UC Davis PhonLab on Friday, Nov 6 at 10AM on the topic "Encoding linguistic meaning into raw audio data with deep neural networks."
November 2, 2020
The 2020-2021 colloquium series continues on Monday, Nov 9, with a talk by David Goldstein (UCLA), held via Zoom from 3:10-5pm. The talk is entitled "Correlated grammaticalization: The rise of articles in Indo-European," and the abstract is as follows:
One of the central empirical goals of historical linguistics is to distinguish probable from improbable changes. This includes not only singleton developments, but also interactions among multiple changes. That is, does one linguistic change become more (or less) likely given the occurrence of some other change? Investigations of this question have been hampered by methodological issues, not the least of which is how exactly correlations between changes should be measured. In this talk, I take up the question of the relationship between the grammaticalization of definite and indefinite articles in Indo-European. Did the emergence of one type of article facilitate (or inhibit) the rise of the other? Using methods developed for the study of correlated evolution in biology (Pagel 1994, 2006), I argue that indefinite articles became more likely to emerge in the wake of the grammaticalization of definite articles. The history of articles in Indo-European is thus an example of correlated grammaticalization. More generally, my results provide further evidence for the view that grammaticalization is not solely a matter of universal principles (e.g., van Gelderen 2011, 2019), but is also crucially conditioned by pre-existing linguistic structure (e.g., Kiparsky 2012, Goldstein 2019).
October 30, 2020
In and around the linguistics department in the next week:
- Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Oct 30 - Zoom - 3-4:30PM
NELS practice talks:
- Amy Rose Deal (UC Berkeley): 3-on-3 restrictions and PCC typology
- Khanin Chaipet (Stony Brook) and Peter Jenks (UC Berkeley): Names as complex indices: On apparent Condition C violations in Thai
- Edwin Ko (UC Berkeley): Feeding agreement: Anti-locality in Crow applicatives of unaccusatives - Fieldwork Forum - Wednesday Nov 4 - Zoom - 3:10-4pm.
Ignacio Montoya (University of Nevada): Reflections on Numu language (Northern Paiute) classes at the university level: Decolonial strategies within a colonial context and implications for language revitalization theory -
Zoom Phonology- Thursday, November 5th- Zoom - 9:00-10:00am PDT
Larry Hyman (Berkeley): Tone in Runyankore Verb Stem ReduplicationFor the zoom link or to be added to the Zoom Phonology Mailing List, contact karee_garvin@berkeley.edu -
Phorum - Friday Nov 6 - 3-4pmEmail Anna Björklund or Dakota Robinson for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the mailing list.
Ana Lívia Agostinho (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil): Word-prosody in Lung’Ie: One system or two? (Collaboration with Larry Hyman)
October 28, 2020
The 2020-2021 colloquium series continues on Monday, Nov 2, with a talk by Kristen Syrett (Rutgers), held via Zoom from 3:10-4:30. The talk is entitled What partial objects tell us about context in nominal semantics, and the abstract is as follows:
Becoming a proficient speaker requires recognizing that the context in which we deliver our utterances affects meaning, even at the lexical level. This influence of context is well known for indexicals like now or pronouns like I or you, gradable adjectives such as big, or predicates of personal taste such as fun, which encode context directly into their semantic representation. Chierchia 2010, Landman 2011, and Rothstein 2010 have proposed that context also plays a key role in the interpretation of count nouns. These proposals not only have implications for lexical representations, but also for the process of language acquisition: what does it mean for children to know that nouns like cup and ball—which are among the earliest words a child comprehends and produces—are context-dependent, and what are the observable consequences? To date, no systematic experimental work has targeted this position on the semantics of nouns or the developmental implications, despite a growing body of work targeting these other context-dependent expressions.
I present a set of studies from an ongoing collaboration with Athulya Aravind (MIT) targeting children’s and adults’ treatment of partial and whole objects as means to probing nominal semantics. We take as a starting point two separate lines of research, investigating and extending them in parallel. The first is a well-known and oft-replicated finding from Shipley & Shepperson (1990): when young children are presented with a set of partial and whole objects (like forks) and are asked to count or quantify them, they count the partial objects as if they were wholes. The second is experimental research on gradability in the adjectival domain (Syrett, Kennedy, & Lidz, 2010). Integrating our results, we argue that while some researchers have taken children’s non-adult-like counting and quantifying behavior with discrete partial objects to signal either a shift in conceptual development or a lack of knowledge of lexical alternatives that implicates pragmatics, the results are consistent with children’s developing understanding of how nominal semantics shrinks or expands the domain of application, and where children diverge from adults is in the ability to identify speaker intentions in a discourse context. Moreover, while nouns may depend on the context, they do so in a way that is distinctly different from relative gradable adjectives—which encode a context-dependent standard—instead align with absolute gradable adjectives. Taken together, the findings indicate that even the most basic count nouns depend on the discourse context for interpretation. While adults seem to know this, it is something that children gradually come to recognize, as they become increasingly sensitive to the goals of communication.
October 21, 2020
In and around the linguistics department in the next week:
- Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Oct 23 - Zoom - 3-4:30PM
Phuong Khuu (UC Berkeley): Tự /tɨ˨/ - Lexical realization of Reflexive Voice⁰ in Vietnamese - Language Variation and Change Working Group - Tuesday Oct 27 - Zoom - 3-4pm
Discussion of Sóskuthy & Stuart-Smith 2020. Please email Annie Helms for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the bCourses site. - Sociolinguistics Lab at Berkeley - Wednesday Oct 28 - Zoom - 3-4pm
Eric Wilbanks (UC Berkeley): Twitter Data Basics for Linguists (workshop).
Please email Isaac Bleaman for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the SLaB email list. - Fieldwork Forum - Wednesday Oct 28 - Zoom - 3:10-4pm.
Amalia Skilton (UT Austin; Max Planck Institute of Psycholinguistics): TBA - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Oct 30 - Zoom - 3-4:30PM
NELS practice talks by Amy Rose Deal, Peter Jenks, and Edwin Ko
Amy Rose Deal: 3-on-3 restrictions and PCC typology
Peter Jenks: Names as complex indices: On apparent Condition C violations in Thai
Edwin Ko: Feeding agreement: Anti-locality in Crow applicatives of unaccusatives
October 19, 2020
The 2020-2021 colloquium series continues on Monday, October 26, with a talk by Juliet Stanton (NYU), held via Zoom from 3:10-4:30. The talk is entitled Rhythm is gradient: evidence from -ative and -ization, and the abstract is as follows:
The rhythmic constraints *Clash and *Lapse are commonly assumed to evaluate syllable-sized constituents: a sequence of two adjacent stressed syllables (óó) violates *Clash, while a sequence of two stressed syllables, separated by two stressless syllables (óooó), violates *Lapse (see e.g. Prince 1983, Gordon 2002 for *Clash; Green & Kenstowicz 1995, Gordon 2002 for *Lapse). In this talk I propose that *Clash and *Lapse can be evaluated gradiently: speakers calculate violations off of a phonetically realized output representation. The closer the two stressed syllables, the greater the violation of gradient *Clash; the further away the two stressed syllables, the greater the violation of gradient *Lapse. Evidence for this claim comes from patterns of secondary stress in Am. English -ative and -ization: in both classes of forms, the inner suffix (-ate and -ize) is more likely to bear stress the further away it is from the rightmost stem stress. Time permitting, we will discuss other sources of evidence for gradient rhythm, including Am. English post-tonic syncope (Hooper 1978), the rhythm rule (e.g. Hayes 1984), and secondary stress in Russian compounds (Gouskova & Roon 2013).
October 16, 2020
In and around the linguistics department in the next week:
- Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Oct 16 - Zoom - 3-4:30PM
Tamisha Tan (Harvard): Having and Being ma-: Raising Applicatives and the Balinese Middle Voice - Language Variation and Change Working Group - Tuesday Oct 20 - Zoom - 3-4pm
Discussion of Bucholtz 2019. Please email Annie Helms for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the bCourses site. - Fieldwork Forum - Wednesday Oct 21 - Zoom - 3:10-4pm.
Amy Rose Deal (Berkeley): Steps toward semantic fieldwork - Zoom Phonology- Thursday, October 22nd- Zoom - 9-10am (PDT)
Karee Garvin (Berkeley):Effects of stress on coordination of syllable onsets
For the zoom link or to be added to the Zoom Phonology Mailing List, contact karee_garvin@berkeley.edu -
Phorum - Friday Oct 23 - 3-4pmEmail Anna Björklund or Dakota Robinson for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the mailing list.
Juliet Stanton (NYU): Allomorph selection precedes phonology: evidence from Yindjibarndi - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Oct 23 - Zoom - 3-4:30PM
Phuong Khuu (UC Berkeley): TBA
October 15, 2020
Congrats to researcher Bernat Bardagil, whose article Number morphology in Panará has just appeared in Linguistic Variation 20:2!
Here's the latest from the Survey of California and Other Indian Languages:
- Myriam Lapierre has archived four new collections on languages of Brazil: Panära (Jê); Kajkwakhrattxi (aka Tapayuna, Jê), with Jérémie Beauchamp; Kawaiwete (aka Kayabi, Tupí-Guaraní); and Xavante (Jê), with Nick Carrick (BA 2019) and current undergraduate student Teela Huff. Other materials related to Panära are archived with the Endangered Languages Archive (ELAR) at SOAS (here).
- David Shaul (PhD 1982) is the author of a new Survey Report, with his monograph Baja California Languages: Description and Linguistic Prehistory, part one of his upcoming series Southern California Pacific Linguistics.
October 9, 2020
In and around the linguistics department in the next week:
- Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Oct 9 - Zoom - 3-4:30PM
Wesley dos Santos (Berkeley): Raising, EPP, and Long-Head Movement in Kawahiva - Language Variation and Change Working Group - Tuesday Oct 13 - Zoom - 3-5pm
Invited talk by Naomi Lapidus Shin (3-3:45pm), followed by general Q&A session. The title of her talk is "The ontogeny of grammatical variation" (abstract). Please email Annie Helms for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the bCourses site. - Fieldwork Forum - Wednesday Oct 14 - Zoom - 3:10-4pm.
Alex Elias (UC Berkeley): TBA. - *dhworom - Friday Oct 16 - 12-1pm
Brian Joseph (Ohio State) will be joining us for a conversation about his 2000 paper entitled Is there such a thing as “grammaticalization?”.
Please email Edwin Ko for the Zoom link and/or to be added to the mailing list. - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Oct 16 - Zoom - 3-4:30PM
Tamisha Tan (Harvard): TBA
October 8, 2020
Congrats to Geoff Bacon, who recently filed his dissertation Evaluating linguistic knowledge in neural networks and has just taken up a position as a computational linguist at Google!
The program for the 51th annual meeting of the North East Linguistic Society (to be hosted virtually by the Université de Quebec à Montreal) has just been released, promising the following presentations by current department members and recent alumni:
- Amy Rose Deal: 3-on-3 restrictions and PCC typology
- Peter Jenks: Names as complex indices: On apparent Condition C violations in Thai
- Laura Kalin and Nicholas Rolle (PhD '18): Deconstructing subcategorization: Conditions on insertion vs. position
- Edwin Ko: Feeding agreement: Anti-locality in Crow applicatives of unaccusatives
Congrats all!
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