The Occitan Studies Working Group is pleased to welcome Robin Chouleur (University of Jyväskylä, Finland) to give a talk called "Working For, With, and In Occitan: From Advocacy to Linguistic Normalization," taking place on Thursday, May 7, at 10am (on the dot!). It should broadly appeal to anyone thinking about creating and finding jobs in minority languages. Pre-registration is required; see poster or link.
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April 29, 2026
April 27, 2026
Please join us for
The Undergraduate Linguistics Honors Colloquium
Monday, May 4, 2026
12:10–2pm
370 Dwinelle Hall (or Zoom for remote guests)
Student Presenters:
- Nyssa Combs
Honors Thesis Title: "An Examination of /s/ Realization in the Basque Community of Bakersfield, California"
Faculty Advisor: Nicole Holliday (Acting Associate Professor of Linguistics)
Second Reader: Alexandra Pfiffner (Lecturer, Department of Linguistics) - Sinéad Neinast
Honors Thesis Title: "L3 Acquisition in Spanish-English Bilinguals: How Language of Instruction Affects Perceptual Categories"
Faculty Advisor: Keith Johnson (Professor Emeritus, Department of Linguistics)
Second Reader: Alexandra Pfiffner (Lecturer, Department of Linguistics) - Ella Mui Shonk
Honors Thesis Title: "Pause Length and Conversational Overlap Variation Between White and Asian American Women"
(Research is funded in part by the Center for Race and Gender at UC Berkeley, and in part by the Department of Linguistics at UC Berkeley)
Faculty Advisor: Nicole Holliday (Acting Associate Professor of Linguistics)
Second Reader: Darya Kavitskaya (Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures and of Linguistics) - Arly Siu
Honors Thesis Title: "The Interaction of Cantonese Tone and English Intonation in Code-switching"
Faculty Advisor: Alexandra Pfiffner (Lecturer, Department of Linguistics)
Second Reader: Alan Yu (Professor of Linguistics)
April 26, 2026
Distinguished author Amy Tan, who was a graduate student in our department (1974-1976), will receive the Alum of the Year Award at the Berkeley Charter Gala on May 21.

April 24, 2026
In and around the Department of Linguistics in the next week:
- Fieldwork Forum - Wednesday Apr 29 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3-4pm
Stephanie Farmer: "The case for Muniche as an Arawakan language" - Phorum - Friday Apr 24 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 4:10-5pm
Larry Lyu (UC Santa Cruz): "On the phonological representation of fricative vowels: Evidence from vocoid-fricative allophony in Nantong Chinese" - Phorum - Friday May 1 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 4:10-5pm
Talk by Michelle Kamigaki-Baron (University of British Columbia) - Sociolinguistics Lab at Berkeley - Friday Apr 24 - Dwinelle 5125 and Zoom - 2-3pm
Riley VanMeter (UC Berkeley): "Perceptions of 'Extravagance': Quantifying Attitudes of Varying Stages of Grammaticalization" - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Apr 24 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3:10-4:30pm
Samba Kane (Stanford): "A Subject Extraction Asymmetry in Pulaar Relative Clauses" - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday May 1 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3:10-4:30pm
Talk by Peter Jenks (UC Berkeley)
April 21, 2026
Julian Vargo gave a talk titled "How Does Font Support Vary?" at the Annual Unicode Technical Committee Meeting on April 21. He analyzed font support across major software vendors as part of the Script Encoding Initiative's broader project tracking "full stack support" timelines for minority scripts around the world.
April 20, 2026
The 2025-2026 Linguistics Colloquium series concludes on Monday, May 4, with a talk by Emily Clem (UC San Diego) titled "Even dependent case is Agree." The talk will take place in Dwinelle 370 and synchronously via Zoom from 3:10-4:30pm, and the abstract is as follows:
Many early generative approaches to case assignment took case to be the result of the same type of dependency-forming operation that results in morphological agreement (in Minimalism, the operation Agree). Under this type of approach, a functional head (probe) establishes a dependency with a nominal (goal), resulting in case being assigned to that nominal. But this view has been challenged, and to a large degree abandoned, in recent years in favor of configurational approaches to case assignment. Under configurational case approaches, it is a structural configuration (specifically, c-command) between two nominals that results in case being assigned to one of those nominals via configurational case rules. This type of configurational approach can derive so-called “dependent” case patterns, where the presence of morphological case on one nominal reflects – or is dependent on – the presence of another nominal in the structure.
In this talk, I explore crosslinguistic data from multiple dependent case patterns and argue that, even in these types of patterns that are taken to be evidence par excellence for configurational approaches to case assignment, we still see the hallmarks of Agree. Specifically, I demonstrate that case assignment is sensitive to: 1) structural locality to specific functional heads rather than other nominals, 2) c-command between functional heads and nominals rather than between nominals, and 3) hierarchy effects that indicate one-to-many probe-goal mappings. By reducing dependent case assignment to an instance of the independently warranted operation Agree, we are able to eliminate the need for configurational case rules from the grammar, resulting in a more parsimonious theory.
April 17, 2026
In and around the Department of Linguistics in the next week:
- Linguistics Department Colloquium - Monday Apr 20 - Dwinelle 370 and Zoom (passcode: lx-colloq) - 3:10-4:30pm
Carly Tex (AICLS): "Strength in Strands: Weaving As a Way of Reflecting on Community Language Revitalization" - Phorum - Friday Apr 24 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 4:10-5pm
Talk by Larry Lyu (UC Santa Cruz) - Sociolinguistics Lab at Berkeley - Friday Apr 24 - Dwinelle 5125 and Zoom - 2-3pm
Riley VanMeter (UC Berkeley): "Perceptions of 'Extravagance': Quantifying Attitudes of Varying Stages of Grammaticalization" - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Apr 17 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3:10-4:30pm
Wendy L. A. López Márquez (UC Berkeley): "Internally-Headed Relative Clauses in Nuntajɨɨyi: Structure, Interpretation, and Restrictions" - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Apr 24 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3:10-4:30pm
Talk by Samba Kane (Stanford University)
April 16, 2026
Gašper Beguš gave a Distinguished Cognitive Science Seminar talk at the Department of Cognitive Science at UC San Diego on April 15, 2026. The talk was titled "Understanding humans, animals, and machines."
Isaac Bleaman has released Yiddish Klal for iOS, a free keyboard app that enables typing in Standard Yiddish ("YIVO spelling") on iPhones and iPads, available in the App Store. The app is based on his widely-used QWERTY keyboard layout for macOS and ChromeOS.
April 15, 2026
Gašper Beguš, Maksymilian Dąbkowski (PhD 2025), Ronald Sprouse, and co-authors published a paper titled "The Phonology of Sperm Whale Coda Vowels" in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. The paper was featured in The Guardian, National Geographic, Scientific American, CBBC, NPR (All Things Considered), and others.
April 14, 2026
Alan Yu will be giving a colloquium talk at Stanford, titled "Individual Differences in Perceptual Cue Weighting: Behavioral, Neurophysiological, and Social Considerations," on April 17.
Johanna Nichols has won a Top Cited Article for 2025 award from Wiley and the American Journal of Biological Anthropology for her paper "Founder effects identify languages of the earliest Americans," AJBA (2024) e24923, which was among the 10 most cited papers in the journal for 2024.
April 13, 2026
Congratulations to Jhonni Carr (Continuing Lecturer, Spanish & Portuguese) on receiving a 2026 Distinguished Teaching Award! Calques readers are invited to attend the award ceremony on Wednesday, April 22, 5-7pm in the Jarvis Auditorium, Grimes Engineering Center.
April 12, 2026
The 2025-2026 Linguistics Colloquium series continues on Monday, April 20, with a talk by Carly Tex (Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival) titled "Strength in Strands: Weaving As a Way of Reflecting on Community Language Revitalization." The talk will take place in Dwinelle 370 and synchronously via Zoom from 3:10-4:30pm, and the abstract is as follows:
This presentation uses the traditional cultural practice of basketweaving as a conceptual framework to analyze the social and emotional fibers required for language survival. Drawing on the work of the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival (AICLS), specifically highlighting footage from the Language Keepers project in partnership with Emergence Magazine and Kalliopeia Foundation, the presenter explores the vital strands of revitalization, centering the lived experiences and stories of community members involved in the reclaiming, maintenance and restoration of the diverse languages of California. The strength of a language project, like weaving, requires strong community connections and time, involving multiple generations in order to sustain it. This talk illustrates that the durability of a language project depends on the health and sustainability of those involved. Like a basket, the beauty is in the details.
This session uses the metaphor of cordage-making, a skill of basketweaving, to explore the social and emotional fibers required for language and cultural survival. Participants will engage in a hands-on weaving exercise, creating a physical representation of collective action that twines linguistic knowledge, intergenerational healing, and interpersonal partnerships.
Alan Yu writes:
The Berkeley Workshop on Individual Differences in Speech and Language was held on April 9–10 and it was a great success. We are grateful to all participants for their outstanding presentations, and extend special thanks to Susan Luong and La Tasha Mulder for their invaluable behind-the-scenes support in ensuring the event ran seamlessly. A selection of photos from the workshop can be found here.
April 10, 2026
In and around the Department of Linguistics in the next week:
- Linguistics Department Colloquium - Monday Apr 13 - Dwinelle 370 and Zoom (passcode: lx-colloq) - 3:10-4:30pm
Teresa Pratt (SFSU): "Language and affect in interaction and performance" - Phorum - Friday Apr 10 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 4:10-5pm
Zach Wellstood (UC Berkeley): "The phonologization of tonal depression and the emergence of a fourth tone height in Cua (Kalahari Khoe)" - Phorum - Friday Apr 17 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 4:10-5pm
Talk by Niko Andrés Schwarz-Acosta (UC Berkeley) - Sociolinguistics Lab at Berkeley - Friday Apr 10 - Dwinelle 5125 and Zoom - 2-3pm
Collaborative workshop on "Indexing a Linguist: CVs & Websites" - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Apr 10 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3:10-4:30pm
Elise Kim (UC Berkeley): "Case co-occurrence constraints are both syntactic and morphophonological: Evidence from Tamang" - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Apr 17 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3:10-4:30pm
Wendy L. A. López Márquez (UC Berkeley): "Internally-Headed Relative Clauses in Nuntajɨɨyi: Structure, Interpretation, and Restrictions"
April 3, 2026
In and around the Department of Linguistics in the next week:
- Ladino/Judeo-Spanish Working Group - Wednesday Apr 8 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 1:10-2pm
Talk by Claire Lozano (Macalester) on the morphophonology of diminutives in Judeo-Spanish - Phorum - Friday Apr 3 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 4:10-5pm
Jinyoung Jo (Stanford): "Can Large Language Models Predict English Phrasal Stress?" - Phorum - Friday Apr 10 - Dwinelle 1229 and Zoom - 4:10-5pm
Zach Wellstood (UC Berkeley): "The phonologization of tonal depression and the emergence of a fourth tone height in Cua (Kalahari Khoe)" - Sociolinguistics Lab at Berkeley - Friday Apr 3 - Dwinelle 5125 and Zoom - 2-3pm
Panel on "Demystifying the Publication Process," with Eve Nuria Fleisig, Julianne Kapner, and Marguerite Morlan - Sociolinguistics Lab at Berkeley - Friday Apr 10 - Dwinelle 5125 and Zoom - 2-3pm
Collaborative workshop on "Indexing a Linguist: CVs & Websites" - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Apr 3 - Dwinelle 1303 - 3:10-4:30pm
Yağmur Kiper (UC Santa Cruz): "Two distinct mechanisms for genitive case assignment across nominalizations" - Syntax and Semantics Circle - Friday Apr 10 - Dwinelle 1303 and Zoom - 3:10-4:30pm
Talk by Elise Kim (UC Berkeley)
April 1, 2026
The Script Encoding Initiative is pleased to be hosting the next Unicode Technical Committee meeting at UC Berkeley on April 21-23, 2026. Standards-makers from companies such as Google, Microsoft, and Apple will discuss topics such as new script and emoji additions to the Unicode text standard.
SEI will be hosting seminar sessions alongside the meeting to share ongoing research with the standards committee, featuring presentations by Julián Vargo (Hispanic Linguistics, UCB), Bríd-Áine Parnell (Informatics, University of Edinburgh), and Anushah Hossain (Linguistics, UCB).
Students and faculty wishing to observe part of the meeting may reach out to Anushah Hossain (anushah.h@berkeley.edu) for more information.
Upcoming talk: "Inventing Adlam: The Origins and Impact of a New African Writing System"
In the late 1980s, teenage brothers Abdoulaye and Ibrahima Barry created Adlam, a new script to represent the Fula language. Today, Adlam is used by millions of speakers across more than twenty countries, encoded in the Unicode Standard, and supported on major digital platforms.
This panel brings together the inventors alongside scholars Coleman Donaldson (An ka taa) and Anushah Hossain (Script Encoding Initiative) to examine Adlam within broader questions of language politics, digital infrastructure, and the global circulation of new writing systems.
April 17, 2026 | 10am-12pm PT
Social Science Matrix, 820 Social Sciences Building and on Zoom
Full details and online registration
Sponsored by the Department of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures, Letters of the Sahara research project, the Script Encoding Initiative, the Center for African Studies, and the Department of Linguistics
Bríd-Áine Parnell, PhD student in Informatics at the University of Edinburgh, will be joining Linguistics as a visiting student from April through May 2026. Bríd-Áine, whose work focuses on cultural bias in natural language processing systems, will be working with the Script Encoding Initiative during her stay, conducting archival research and expert interviews with language technologists in the Bay Area.

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