LAGB Autumn Meeting 2002 at UMIST

From: Marjolein Groefsema (M.Groefsema@herts.ac.uk)
Date: Fri Jul 12 2002 - 15:01:36 GMT

  • Next message: Barbara MacMahon: "Conference announcement"

    LINGUISTICS ASSOCIATION OF GREAT BRITAIN

    Autumn Meeting 2002: University of Manchester Institute of Science and
    Technology (UMIST)

    The 2001 Autumn Meeting of the Linguistics Association of Great Britain
    will be held at UMIST, from September 17 to 19. The Local Organiser is Paul
    Bennett <paul@ccl.umist.ac.uk>.
    The Meeting will be immediately preceded by a Workshop on Agreement; for
    more information, see below.

    The conference website is at: http://mull.ccl.umist.ac.uk/events/lagb/

    Manchester, host of the 2002 Commonwealth Games, is at the heart of the
    largest urban area in the north of England. Cultural attractions include
    the recently-refurbished City Art Gallery, the Museum of Science and
    Industry, and the Lowry in nearby Salford. The city centre includes a
    sizeable Chinatown and the famous Gay Village, plus the renovated canal
    area of Castlefield. The Peak District and Pennines are areas of natural
    beauty close by.

    Accommodation: The accommodation for conference participants is in the
    Weston Building, which contains both a hotel and a hall of residence with
    single en-suite rooms. Sessions will be in the Staff House Conference
    Centre, a few minutes' walk away.

    Registration: Registration will be in the reception area of the Weston
    Building.

    Bar: The Weston Hotel includes a bar which is open to those staying in the
    Hall.

    Food: please indicate vegetarian and any other dietary requirements on the
    booking form below.

    Childcare: If you require childcare during the conference, please contact
    the Local Organiser for further details.

    Travel : The nearest railway station is Manchester Piccadilly, which is 5
    minutes' walk from the UMIST campus. There are at least hourly services
    from most major British cities - the service from London Euston takes about
    2hr40min. Manchester International Airport is linked to Manchester
    Piccadilly station by a frequent train service (usually every 15 minutes).

    Manchester's Chorlton Street Coach Station is also just a few minutes' walk
    from UMIST, and has regular National Express services from the rest of the
    UK.

    Manchester is at the heart of the national motorway network. From the
    motorways (M56, M60, M61, M62, M67) or major roads follow signs to
    Manchester City Centre, then for Universities. The
    Conference website has a link to 'getting to UMIST' on the university site.

    Delegates must ensure that they do NOT go to the University of Manchester,
    which is a separate institution on a campus about a mile away from UMIST.

    To get to the Campus from the Coach Station:
    Leave the Coach Station by the main exit, onto Chorlton Street. Turn right,
    then take the first right (Bloom Street). Take the first left, Sackville
    Street, and continue down this, going straight ahead at the lights. Go
    under the railway bridge, and the Weston Building is 50 yards ahead on your
    right.
    The Weston Building is on Sackville Street, and the main UMIST campus is on
    the other side of this road.
    From the train station, cross London Road, go down Fairfield Street, bear
    left into Whitworth Street, past the UMIST Main Building (on your left),
    then turn left into Sackville Street. Then as above: go under the railway
    bridge, and the Weston Building is 50 yards ahead on your right.

    Parking: Delegates would be required to park in the Charles Street
    multi-storey car park, which is across the road from the Weston Building.
    The cost is GBP6.00 per day or GBP8.00 for 24 hours (pay on exit).

    Events:
    The Henry Sweet Lecture 2002 will be delivered by Professor Anthony Kroch
    (University of Pennsylvania) and is entitled: 'Variation and Change in the
    Historical Syntax of English'.

    There will also be a Workshop on Quantitative and Corpus-based Perspectives
    on the Morpho-Syntactic History of English, organised by Dr Susan Pintzuk
    (University of York) Contributors are Dr Eric Haeberli (University of
    Reading), Professor Tony Kroch (University of Pennsylvania), Dr Susan
    Pintzuk (University of York), and Dr Ann Taylor (University of York).

    A Language Tutorial on Romani, will be given by Dr Yaron Matras (University
    of Manchester).

    There will be a Session of Linguistics at School on Community languages,
    organised by Dr Anthea Fraser Gupta (University of Leeds).

    There will be a Wine Reception on Tuesday night, hosted by the Department
    of Language and Linguistics.

    Bookings: Bookings should be sent to Paul Bennett, Department of Language
    and Linguistics, UMIST, PO Box 88, Manchester, M60 1QD. Due to UMIST
    needing to know how many rooms will be taken by the end of August, bookings
    for accommodation have to be in by the 30th of August. After this date
    accommodation can not be guaranteed.

    Abstracts: are available to members who are unable to attend the meeting.
    Please order using the booking form below.

    Internet home page: The LAGB internet home page is active at the following
    address: http://www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/LAGB/

    Future Meetings:
    14-16 April 2003 University of Sheffield
    4 - 6 September 2003 University of Oxford
    Spring 2004 (provisional) University of Surrey Roehampton.

    ******************************************************************************

    AGREEMENT WORKSHOP
    The message below has been received from the organisers of the workshop:

    On 16-17 September 2002, immediately before the main meeting, there will be
    a workshop on Agreement, with papers by Dunstan Brown (University of
    Surrey), Bernard Comrie (MPI Leipzig), Greville Corbett (University of
    Surrey), Nick Evans (University of Melbourne), Marianne Mithun (UC Santa
    Barbara), Maria Polinsky (UC San Diego), Anna Siewierska (University of
    Lancaster), and Carole Tiberius (University of Surrey). The aims are to
    discuss central issues of agreement and to disseminate the results from an
    ESRC project which includes a typological database. We intend the workshop
    to be of interest to linguists of different persuasions and to
    psycholinguists.

    The workshop is organised by the Surrey Morphology Group. It is sponsored
    by the ESRC and the LAGB. For booking information see the main booking form.

    General information on our website:
    http://www.surrey.ac.uk/LIS/SMG/projects/agreement/Conference/conference.html

    Queries to: c.tiberius@surrey.ac.uk
    ******************************************************************************

    LAGB Committee members:

    President Professor April McMahon
    Department of English Language and Linguistics, University of Sheffield, 5
    Shearwood Road, Sheffield S10 2TD
    april.mcmahon@shef.ac.uk
    http://www.shef.ac.uk/english/language/staff/april.html

    Honorary Secretary Dr Ad Neeleman
    Dept. of Phonetics and Linguistics, University College London, Gower
    Street, London WC1E 6BT ad@ling.ucl.ac.uk
    http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/ad/home.htm

    Membership Secretary Dr David Willis
    Dept. of Linguistics, University of Cambridge, Sidgwick Avenue, Cambridge
    CB3 9DA
    dwew2@cam.ac.uk
    http://www.mml.cam.ac.uk/ling/staff/profile.html#willis

    Meetings Secretary Dr Marjolein Groefsema
    Dept. of Linguistics, University of Hertfordshire, Watford Campus,
    Aldenham, Herts. WD2 8AT
    m.groefsema@herts.ac.uk
    http://www.herts.ac.uk/fhle/faculty/humanities/web%20pages/linguistics/MGroe
    fsema.htm

    Treasurer Dr Wiebke Brockhaus
    Dept. of German, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL
    wiebke.brockhaus@man.ac.uk
    http://www.art.man.ac.uk/german/brockhs.htm

    Assistant Secretary Dr Gillian Ramchand
    Centre for Linguistics and Philology, Walton Street, Oxford OX1 2HG
    gillian.ramchand@ling-phil.oxford.ac.uk

    ****************************************************************************
    ***
     
    PROGRAMME

    Tuesday 17 September

    1.00 LUNCH

    2.00 Workshop on Quantitative and Corpus-based Perspectives on the
    Morpho-Syntactic
                History of English
                Organised by Dr Susan Pintzuk (University of York).
                Contributors are Dr Eric Haeberli (University of Reading),
    Professor Tony Kroch
                (University of Pennsylvania), Dr Susan Pintzuk (University of
    York), and Dr Ann Taylor
                (University of York).

    3.45 TEA

    4.15 Workshop continues.

    6.30 DINNER

    7.45 Henry Sweet Lecture 2002

    Prof. Tony Kroch (University of Pennsylvania)

    'Variation and Change in the Historical Syntax of English'

    9.15 WINE PARTY
    Hosted by the Department of Language and Linguistics.

    Wednesday 18 September

    Session A
    9.00 Kairi Igarashi (Keiwa College) 'A pragmatic account of almost'
    9.20 Marjolein Groefsema (Hertfordshire) 'Concepts as word meanings: A
    dynamic view'
    10.20 Eva Delgado Lavín (Basque Country) 'Concessive conditionals: Another
    look at the bridge example'

    Session B
    9.00 Ana Luís (Coimbra) & Andrew Spencer (Essex) 'A paradigm function
    account of "mesoclisis" in European Portuguese'
    9.40 Matthew Baerman (Surrey) 'Indexing and directionality in inflection'
    10.20 Dunstan Brown, Marina Chumakina, Greville Corbett & Andrew Hippisley
    (Surrey) 'Prototypical suppletion'

    Session C
    9.00 Anna Anastassiadis-Symeonidis (Thessaloniki), Angeliki Efthymiou
    (Aegean) & Asimakis Fliatouras (Patras) 'Conversion or ellipsis? Evidence
    from Modern Greek'
    9.40 Anders Holmberg (Durham) 'A mainland Scandinavian subjectless
    construction'
    10.20 Joanne Close (York) 'Multiple have in English dialects'

    11.00 COFFEE

    Session A
    11.30 Bill Palmer (New South Wales) 'Rethinking spatial frames of reference'
    12.10 Simon Musgrave (Leiden) 'Typological databases and linguistic data: A
    new approach'

    Session B
    11.30 Alastair Butler (Amsterdam) 'Licensing polarity sensitive items: An
    interface story'
    12.10 Nicholas Sobin (Wales, Bangor) 'Negative inversion as non-movement'

    Session C
    11.30 Deborah Anderson (Research Centre for English and Applied
    Linguistics, Cambridge) 'Tough-structures in early child English:
    Reconciling synchronic evidence with a diachronic claim'
    12.10 Dimitra Kolliakou (Newcastle) & Jonathan Ginzburg (KCL) 'Elliptical
    utterances in children's conversations: A constraint-based approach'

    1.00 LUNCH

    Session A
    2.00 Language tutorial on Romani
                    Dr Yaron Matras (Manchester)

    Session B
    2.00 Linguistics in Schools: on Community languages
                     Chair - Dr Anthea Fraser Gupta (University of Leeds)

    3.30 TEA

    Session A
    4.00 Irina Nikolaeva (Konstanz) 'A constructional approach to mixed
    categories (between nouns and adjectives)'

    Session B
    4.00 Danijela Trenkic (Heriot Watt) 'Word order, adjectival "definite"
    aspect, and demonstratives in Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian do not
    grammaticalise definiteness'

    Session C
    4.00 Ryo Otoguro (Essex) 'Japanese verb-verb compounds and grammatical
    information spreading'

    4.45 LAGB Business Meeting

    6.30 DINNER

    8.00-9.30 Language tutorial continues

    Thursday 19 September

    Session A
    9.00 Timothy Jowan Curnow (La Trobe) 'First person verbal agreement as
    logophoric marker'
    9.40 Peter Schmidt (Trier) 'Grammatical agreement: How much syntax, how
    much semantics?'
    10.20 Robert D. Borsley (Essex) 'On the nature of Welsh VSO clauses'

    Session B
    9.00 Miriam Butt (Konstanz) & Biljana Scott (Oxford) 'Structuring events:
    The role of light verbs and directionals'
    9.40 Geoffrey Horrocks (Cambridge) & Melita Stavrou (Thessaloniki)
    'Morphologically encoded aspect and resultative predication: Why some
    people just can't "wipe the sink clean"'
    10.20 Stéphanie Pourcel (Durham) 'Rethinking "Thinking for speaking"'

    Session C
    9.00 Ho-Young Lee (Seoul National) 'Acoustic cues of Korean nuclear tones'
    9.40 Sang Jik Rhee (Leiden) 'Nasals and segmental complexity in Korean'
    10.20 Pierre Rucart (Paris VII) 'Verbal template in Qafar'

    11.00 COFFEE

    Session A
    11.30 Ruth Kempson & Masayuki Otsuka (KCL) 'Generation in a parsing-based
    grammar formalism'
    12.10 M. Lynne Murphy (Sussex) 'Three feet tall, but not thirty pounds
    heavy: Licensing the measure phrase + adjective construction'

    Session B
    11.30 Kersti Börjars, Tolli Eythòrsson & Nigel Vincent (Manchester) 'On
    defining degrammaticalisation'
    12.10 Eric Haeberli & Richard Ingham (Reading) 'The position of negation
    and adverbs in early Modern English'

    Session C
    11.30 Svetlana Toldova & Natalia Serdobolskaia (Moscow State) 'Information
    structure and direct object encoding in Mari (Cheremis)'
    12.10 Elena Kalinina (Moscow State) 'Complement clauses in Bagwalal: The
    implications for the typology of complement clauses'

    1.00 LUNCH

    Session A
    2.00 Patrick Honeybone (Edge Hill) 'Where did you get that [x]? The
    introduction of consonantal lenition into Liverpool English'
    2.40 April McMahon & Paul Heggarty (Sheffield) 'Measuring phonetic
    similarity'
    3.20 Victorina González Díaz (Manchester & Vigo) 'On the evolution of
    (adjectival) double periphrastic comparatives in early Modern English'

    Session B
    2.00 Virve-Anneli Vihman (Edinburgh) & Katrin Hiietam (Manchester) 'The
    personal passive in Estonian'
    2.40 Satu Manninen (Lund) & Diane Nelson (Leeds) 'The Finnish passive is
    really a passive'
    3.20 Katrin Hiietam (Manchester) 'On definite object marking in Estonian'

    Session C
    2.00 Eric Mathieu (UCL) 'Partial wh-movement and intervention effects:
    German versus Hungarian'
     2.40 Sun-Ho Hong (Essex) 'Anti-superiority effects and the Relative
    Uniformity Principle'
    3.20 Kook-Hee Gill, Steve Harlow & George Tsoulas (York) 'Disjunction,
    quantification and free choice'

    4.00 TEA and CLOSE

    _____________________________________________________________________
    BOOKING FORM
    Please return this form, with your remittance, to: Paul Bennett, Department
    of Language and Linguistics, UMIST, PO Box 88, Manchester, M60 1QD.
    Cheques should be made payable to 'UMIST'. Cheques should be in sterling
    and drawn on a UK bank. Alternatively, UMIST will accept payment in Euros
    (but not Eurocheques). It is also possible to pay by credit card (Visa or
    Mastercard, but not Amex or any others).

    Bookings must be received by 30 August to guarantee accommodation.
    _____________________________________________________________________
    NAME: INSTITUTION:

    ADDRESS FOR THIS MAILING:

    E-MAIL ADDRESS:

    I enclose remittance as indicated (select appropriate package):

    1. Complete package Agreement Workshop £70.00
    (Includes Workshop fee, Monday lunch, B & B Monday/Tuesday in hall)

    2. Complete package LAGB Meeting:
    (a) including Tuesday lunch, B & B in hall: £180.00 .........
    (b) excluding Tuesday lunch, B & B in hall: £170.00 .........
    Surcharge for non-members, £5.00 .........
                                                         TOTAL: ..........

    3. Selected items Agreement Workshop:
         (a) Workshop fee (OBLIGATORY) to cover cost of
          abstracts, tea and coffee, room bookings. £17.50 £17.50
         (b) Monday lunch £11.75 ..........
         (c) B&B Monday/Tuesday in hall £41.25 ..........
         (d) B&B Monday/Tuesday in hotel £75.00 ..........

         Selected items LAGB Meeting
         (a) conference fee (OBLIGATORY) to cover cost of
         abstracts, tea and coffee, room bookings,
         speakers' expenses etc. £35.00 £35.00
         (b) Tuesday lunch £11.75 ..........
         (c) Tuesday dinner £15.90 ..........
         (d) B&B Tuesday/Wednesday in hall £41.25 ..........
         (e) B&B Tuesday/Wednesday in hotel £75.00 ..........
         (f) Wednesday lunch £11.75 ..........
         (g) Wednesday dinner £15.90 ..........
         (h) B&B Wednesday/Thursday in hall £41.25 ..........
         (i) B&B Wednesday/Thursday in hotel £75.00 ..........
         (j) Thursday lunch £11.75 ..........

         (k) Surcharge for non-members, £5.00 ..........

                                                                    TOTAL ..........

    4. Abstracts only, for those not attending:
    £5.00 UK.............. £6.00 overseas...............

    TICK TO RECEIVE A BOOKING RECEIPT: ...........

    TICK TO RECEIVE ABSTRACTS WITH YOUR BOOKING RECEIPT: ...............

    TICK IF YOU WOULD LIKE VEGETARIAN FOOD: ......................

    OTHER SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS (e.g. DIET, ACCOMMODATION): .............



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri Jul 12 2002 - 14:45:50 GMT