UCL LINGUISTICS


Accepted Papers:

Artemis Alexiadou and Kirsten Gengel (University of Stuttgart): NP ellipsis without focus movement/projections: the role of Classifiers

Dora Alexopoulou (University of Cambridge) and Mary Baltazani (Ioanina): Recursive focus and prominence

Lisa Cheng (Leiden University) and Laura Downing (ZAS): Against FocusP: Arguments from Zulu

Hyun Kyung Hwang (Cornell University): Wh-intonation and Information Structure in South Kyeongsang Korean, Fukuoka Japanese and Tokyo Japanese

Jieun Kiaer (Oxford University) and Ruth Kempson (King's College London): Topic and Focus phenomena in Korean and Syntax-Processing/Phonology Interface

Jong-Bok Kim (Kyung-Hee University) and Peter Sells (SOAS): Korean Nominalizer 'kes' and its Information Structure

Nancy C. Kula (University of Essex): Post-verbal focus in Bantu: In-situ, IAV and final focus

Vieri Samek-Lodovici (University College London): Information Structure in Italian Clauses

Stavros Skopeteas (University of Potsdam) and Elisabeth Verhoeven (University of Bremen): The content of non-argument positions at the left periphery: Evidence from Yucatec Maya

Balazs Suranyi (HAS, Budapest): Syntactic configuration and interpretation

Michael Wagner (Cornell University/McGill): Focus and Recursion

Alternates:

1. Malte Zimmermann (Potsdam University), Daniel Hole (Potsdam University), and Wolfram Schaffar (University Bonn): Head-Internal Clefts in (South) East Asian: A cross-linguistic comparison of Burmese, Japanese, and Chinese.

2. Beste Kamali (Harvard University): Phonological Phrasing Meets Scrambling: The Case of Turkish