Hannah Sande will give a colloquium talk on Discontinuous Harmony in Guébie at the University of Illinois Urban-Champaign on Monday, October 7.
All News
September 23, 2024
Mairi McLaughlin gave a keynote presentation called "Variation, varieties, variants: the role of the media" at the 14th Kongress der Frankoromanistikverbands in Passau, Germany on September 26th. Congrats!
Andrew Garrett's book The Unnaming of Kroeber Hall: Language, Memory, and Indigenous California is featured in two new publications:
September 19, 2024
September 18, 2024
In and around the Department of Linguistics in the next week:
- SSCircle – Friday, Sep 20 - Dwinelle 1303 - 3-4:30pm
Amy Rose Deal (UC Berkeley) on "Case discrimination, Agree, and the theory of features" - Phorum – Friday, Sep. 20 - 4-5pm
Niko Schwarz-Acosta (UC Berkeley) on “Al Cʉɐntu da Penuchu”: Perceptual Learning of a Vowel Shift in Mexican Spanish - Ladino/Judeo-Spanish Working Group – Monday, Sep. 23 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 3-4pm
Rachel Bortnick (Ladinokomunita/American Ladino League) on Ladino language revitalization efforts and her own life - LRWG – Wednesday, Sep. 25 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3-4pm
Beth Piatote (Berkeley) with a workshop/talk on writing and creative expression in language revitalization - SSCircle – Friday, Sep 27 - Dwinelle 1303 -- 3-4:30pm
Maksymilian Dąbkowski (UC Berkeley), Title TBA - Phorum – Friday, Sep. 27 - Zoom - 4-5pm
Alexia Hernandez (Stanford) on "The role of experience on the cognitive underpinnings of linguistic bias: An interdisciplinary investigation of Miami-based Cuban American speech"
Gašper Beguš is giving a talk at the linguistics department at Harvard University on Friday, September 20 (https://linguistics.fas.harvard.edu/blog/week-sept-16). The title of the talk is "Building realistic models of language with deep learning". Congrats!
September 17, 2024
Rebecca Jarvis gave a poster at Sinn und Bedeutung 29 on Tuesday (https://sub29.unime.it/il-convegno/).
September 16, 2024
September 12, 2024
In and around the Department of Linguistics in the next week:
- Workshop on Phonological Domains and What Conditions Them – Friday, September 13 and Saturday, September 14
Please register at this link if you plan to attend. - SSCircle – Friday, Sep 13 - 3-4:30pm
No meeting; attend the Phonological domains workshop instead! - Phorum – Friday, Sep. 13 - Dwinelle 1229 - 4-5pm
No meeting; attend the Phonological domains workshop instead! - Linguistics department colloquium – Monday, Sep 16 - Dwinelle 370 - 3-4:30pm
Peter Svenonius (University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway) - "When can a single word be biclausal? Word structure and the limits of monoclausality" -
Fforum – Wednesday, Sep. 18 - Dwinelle 1303 - 3-4pm
Round Robin! - Phorum – Friday, Sep. 20 - Dwinelle 1229 - 4-5pm
Niko Schwarz-Acosta (UC Berkeley) on “Al Cʉɐntu da Penuchu”: Perceptual Learning in Spanish
- SSCircle – Friday, Sep 20 - Dwinelle 1303 -- 3-4:30pm
Amy Rose Deal (UC Berkeley), title TBA
Here's the latest from the California Language Archive:
- On Wednesday began the first visit supported by the new CLA Community Research Grant, a group of Cucapah community members and allies coming from Mexicali, Mexico. They consulted documentary materials on the language in the CLA (pictured just below) and the Bancroft Library, and presented the "Manual de lengua Cucapáh" at Language Revitalization Working Group, co-authored by Fernando Márquez Duarte (UC Riverside; second from left) and elder Margarita Valenzuela Portillo, whose son Alejandro Maclis V. is pictured second from right.

Zachary O'Hagan was in Lyon, France earlier this week participating in the workshop Classifiers in the Arawakan Languages at the Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage. He presented on "Distinguishing Classifiers from Inalienable Nouns in Caquinte".
September 6, 2024
"Various diagnostics have been identified to determine whether a complex predicate, such as a causative structure, involves a single clause or two. The diagnostics pick out clausal properties of subparts of the predicate, for example an agent or a distinctly modifiable event description is sometimes understood as a sufficient condition for clausehood, and if the subordinate part of a complex predicate has one of these things independently of the superordinate part, the complex predicate is deemed to be biclausal. This sometimes holds even when the predicate is considered to consist of a single word (as with Japanese indirect causatives, as argued by Shibatani and Kuno in the 1970s; see Matsumoto 1996 CSLI for discussion and references).
However, there are striking limits on biclausal single words, which reveal constraints on the architecture of grammar and the interface between grammar and the lexicon. First, restrictions on the conceptual content associated with listed lexical roots mean that certain kinds of information can only be expressed in syntactically complex forms. Second, functional structure is constrained --- I argue that the constraints follow from a certain conception of extended projections, which are responsible for a sharp difference between what can be expressed with and without embedding of one extended projection in another. This leads to motivated definitions of mono- and biclausality."
September 5, 2024
Becky Jarvis, Tzintia Montaño Ramírez, and Zachary O'Hagan are in Berlin this week giving presentations and posters at Language Documentation and Archiving at the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften (pictured here with organizing committee member Kelsey Neely, PhD 2019; Amalia Skilton, PhD 2019; and Bernat Bardagil, postdoc 2018-2020).

September 4, 2024
In and around the Department of Linguistics in the next week:
- SSCircle – Friday, Sep 6 - 3-4:30pm
Round robin! Join us at Amy Rose's house to discuss any tricky data that you've come across recently. - Phorum – Friday, Sep. 6 - Dwinelle 1229 - 4-5pm
Introductions & round robin! -
Ladino/Judeo-Spanish Working Group - Monday, September 9, Dwinelle 1229, 3-4pm
Join us for the first-ever meeting of the Ladino Working Group! In this beginner-friendly conversation hour, we will be introducing ourselves in Ladino and sharing some family background (no matter where we are from). There will be snacks! - LRWG – Wednesday, Sep. 11 - Dwinelle 1303 - 3-4pm
Fernando Márquez Duarte (UC Riverside), Lorenia Gutiérrez Moreto Cruz, and Alejandro Maclis Valenzuela: Book presentation: a new language manual for Cucupáh
- Phorum – Thursday, Sep. 12 - Dwinelle 1303 - 4-5pm
Martin Krämer on "Sonority, markedness and the OCP" (Note the unusual time and place) - Workshop on Phonological Domains and What Conditions Them – Friday, September 13 and Saturday, September 14
Please register at this link if you plan to attend. - SSCircle – Friday, Sep 13 - 3-4:30pm
No meeting; attend the Phonological domains workshop instead! - Linguistics department colloquium – Monday, Sep 16 - 3-4:30pm
Peter Svenonius, Title TBA
August 29, 2024
Here's the latest from the California Language Archive:
- Julianne Kapner has accessioned a new collection of recordings and transcripts of word lists and oral histories from the ongoing Armenian Language in the Bay Area (ALBA) Project.
- Josefina Bittar (UCSC) has accessioned the Corpus del Español y Guaraní Paraguayos de Asunción, 14 sociolinguistic interviews in Paraguayan Guaraní (Tupí-Guaraní; Paraguay) and Spanish from 2015.
- Emanuele Fabiano, Joshua Homan, Manuel and Samuel Nuribe Arahuata, and Zachary O'Hagan have accessioned a new collection of audio and video recordings of interviews predominantly in Urarina (isolate; Peru) about the history of the Urituyacu River, especially the history of Omurano people, based on collaborative research from 2022.
August 27, 2024
In and around the Department of Linguistics in the next week:
- Phorum - Friday, Sep. 6 - Dwinelle 1229 - 3-4pm
Introductions & round robin!
- Syntax & Semantics Circle – Friday, Sep 6 - 3-4:30pm
Round robin! Join us at Amy Rose's house to discuss any tricky data that you've come across recently. - Occitan Studies working group - Friday, Sep. 6 - on Zoom - 1-2pm: Topic: Language Museums and Heritage. Please contact Oliver Whitmore (whitmore.1@berkeley.edu) to obtain the readings and zoom code.
This past Wednesday, Amber Galvano and colleagues represented UC Berkeley's D-Lab at the OpenAI Forum's "AI Ethics in Action" virtual event, where they discussed their personal trajectory and experience participating in the Data Science for Social Justice workshop.
On September 13-14, 2024 there will be a workshop on "Phonological Domains and What Conditions Them", co-hosted by Hannah Sande (UC Berkeley) and Martin Krämer (Tromsø), held in the UC Berkeley Linguistics Department (in Dwinelle 370). The schedule for the workshop, along with a list of presenters and talk titles, can be found on the website (click here). Many current and past UC Berkeley Linguists will be speaking, along with other prominent members of the field. If you would like to attend, please register (link here) by no later than September 1.
August 22, 2024
Maksymilian Dąbkowski has been awarded the American Philosophical Society's 2024 Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research on "Stress and glottalization across lexical classes in A'ingae (or Cofán; Ecuador)." Congrats, Maks!
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