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Cambridge Linguistics Forum
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The Cambridge Linguistics Forum (CLF) is the official series of talks and discussions covering Theoretical and Applied Linguistics (TAL) in the Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages and Linguistics. The main aims of the CLF are to: (1) Support research areas with forum/funding for workshops and invited speakers. (2) Highlight prominent topics within research areas relevant to TAL Section staff and students. (3) Showcase work within Cambridge Linguistics. (4) Keep in touch with alumni. Our web page: https://www.mml.cam.ac.uk/cambridge-linguistics-forum-series If you have a question about this list, please contact: CLF; Mireia; ELENA ISOLANI; yx324. If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser. 0 upcoming talks and 47 talks in the archive. Quantity implicature and perspective-taking: insights from a novel taskDr Napoleon Katsos (University of Cambridge). Thursday 25 May 2023, 16:30-18:00 Moving up and down parameter hierarchies: markedness, third factors and diachronyProf Ian Roberts (University of Cambridge). Thursday 11 May 2023, 16:30-18:00 The interaction of gender marking and perspective-takingProf Stefan Hinterwimmer (Bergische Universität Wuppertal). Lucia Windsor Room (Newnham College). Thursday 27 April 2023, 16:30-18:00 Getting Passive by Extending Classes: A Novel Verb-Learning Study with Adults and ChildrenDr Emma Nguyen (Newcastle University). Lecture Room 3 - Faculty of Divinity. Thursday 26 January 2023, 15:30-17:00 Sentiment analysis: methods and applicationsDr Antonio Moreno Ortiz (Universidad de Málaga). Thursday 10 November 2022, 17:00-18:30 Vowel harmony as a cue for phonological phrasingJoin the talk online here: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/87391346417?pwd=NnVUa0gydlFDNEFycmg2bUpFOGhTdz09 Prof Frank Kügler (Goethe Universität Frankfurt). Thursday 27 October 2022, 17:00-18:30 Complement clause section as a (non-)local relationJoin the talk online here: https://meet.google.com/ygt-zovb-wnp Dr Anna Roussou (University of Patras). Thursday 13 October 2022, 16:30-18:00 The grammar of self-talk. What different modes of talking reveal about the language faculty.Martina Wiltschko (Universitat Pompeu Fabra). Thursday 19 May 2022, 16:30-18:00 Exploring Multicultural London English across Offline and Online spaceDr Christian Ilbury (University of Edinburgh). Faculty of English and Online. Thursday 03 March 2022, 16:30-18:00 Talking College: A Community Based Language and Racial Identity Development Model for Black College Student JusticeProf. Anne Charity Hudley (Stanford University). Thursday 17 February 2022, 16:30-18:00 The development of Old English conjunct clauses: How syntactic changes interactDr Richard Zimmermann (University of Manchester). Faculty of English and Online. Thursday 03 February 2022, 16:30-18:00 Dynamics of multilingualism in language revitalisation and activism: Applied linguistic insights from Oaxaca, MexicoDr. Haley de Korne (University of Oslo). Thursday 25 November 2021, 16:30-18:00 Vulnerable Left Periphery: Why there is no other alternative to changeProf. Enoch Aboh (University of Amsterdam). Thursday 11 November 2021, 16:30-18:00 Morphophonological issues in the development of Huave language revitalisation materialsDr. Yuni Kim (University of Essex). Thursday 28 October 2021, 16:30-18:00 Vowel harmony as a cue for phonological phrasingProf. Frank Kügler (Goethe Universität Frankfurt). Wednesday 27 October 2021, 17:00-18:30 Translating the Deaf Self: Translanguaging, interpreting & identities of deaf signers at workPlease register by noon on the day of the talk https://forms.gle/PnyrnLjX4NAKnRMBA Jemina Napier (Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh). Thursday 17 June 2021, 16:30-18:00 Identity construction and self-presentation on WhatsApp profile statuses: What does our status say about us?Please register by noon on the day of the talk: https://forms.gle/Pv8gjUQsuMiyWnUMA Carmen Maíz Arévalo (Universidad Complutense Madrid). Thursday 03 June 2021, 16:30-18:00 How do stylistic features “work” in news texts about a violent event that took place abroad? A cross-cultural case study.Please register by noon on the day of the talk https://forms.gle/UqMEAFyne44WyZCP6 Ashley Riggs (Université de Genève). Thursday 27 May 2021, 16:30-18:00 On the phonetics and phonology of English H* and L+H* pitch accentsPlease register by noon on the day of the talk: https://forms.gle/MCZQPEjAVVryicLY6 Amalia Arvaniti (Radboud University). Thursday 18 March 2021, 16:30-18:00 Multiethnolects as contact languages: the case for the Jamaican influence in LondonPlease register by noon on the day of the talk: https://forms.gle/1RUHXqvAEkBvTAps5 Paul Kerswill (University of York). Thursday 04 March 2021, 16:30-18:00 Language change in bilingual returnee children: mutual effects of bilingual experience and cognitionPlease register by noon on the day of the talk: https://forms.gle/gNiWovYWud8dTQds9 Maki Kubota (UiT The Arctic University of Norway). Thursday 04 February 2021, 16:30-18:00 Voice-Prosody and Technologies to Give Voice to Endangered Languages: an Irish PerspectivePlease register by noon on the day of the talk: https://forms.gle/pW2NTo3WHdVe59vD6 Ailbhe Ní Chasaide (Trinity College Dublin). Thursday 26 November 2020, 16:30-18:00 The crucial role of truth-compatible interferencesPlease register by noon on the day of the talk: https://forms.gle/jAiDPFv3tJ3XMiSb6 Mira Ariel (Tel Aviv University). Thursday 12 November 2020, 16:30-18:00 The pronoun interpretation problem in bilingual Dutch-German childrenPlease register by noon on the day of the talk: https://forms.gle/mW1tMswxgY6Nwhug6 Petra Hendriks (University of Groningen). Thursday 29 October 2020, 16:30-18:00 Culture, language and cognition: a methodological and theoretical exploration with reference to spatial conceptsPlease register for this talk by NOON on Oct 15th Chris Sinha (University of Hunan, University of East Anglia). Thursday 15 October 2020, 16:30-18:00 [Online talk] - Iconic PluralsPlease SIGN UP for the event (deadline Thursday, 18th of June, 12pm BST): https://www.psytoolkit.org/cgi-bin/psy2.5.3/survey?s=tuYFO -- You will receive an attendance link on Thursday before the talk. Prof Philippe Schlenker (Institut Jean-Nicod, CNRS / New York University). Thursday 18 June 2020, 16:30-18:00 CANCELLED DUE TO COVID-19 - TBCThere will be a tea and coffee reception from 4pm. Dr Alexandra Perovic (UCL). English Faculty Building, ground floor, TBC. Thursday 04 June 2020, 16:30-18:00 [Online talk] - Monosyllabic Salience in Cantonese: Facilitation of transference of monosyllabic English words (MEWs) into Hong Kong Cantonese-English mixed codePlease SIGN UP for the event (deadline Thursday, 4th of June, 10am BST): https://www.psytoolkit.org/cgi-bin/psy2.5.3/survey?s=NLNKu -- You will receive an attendance link on Thursday before the talk. Prof David Li (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University). Thursday 04 June 2020, 12:30-14:00 CANCELLED DUE TO COVID-19 - TBCThere will be a tea and coffee reception from 4pm. Dr Marijke De Belder (Oldenburg University). English Faculty Building, ground floor, TBC. Thursday 21 May 2020, 16:30-18:00 [Online talk] L2 phonological learning in adults: The role of language background, age of acquisition, and exposureTo register for the online event, please follow the link below: https://www.psytoolkit.org/cgi-bin/psy2.5.3/survey?s=DszBy Dr Job Schepens (TU Dortmund). Thursday 30 April 2020, 16:30-18:00 Mechanisms in non-native speech perceptionThere will be a tea and coffee reception from 4pm. Dr Sharon Peperkamp (LSCP, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris). English Faculty Building, ground floor, TBC. Thursday 27 February 2020, 16:30-18:00 Conveying quantity pragmaticallyThere will be a tea and coffee reception from 4pm. Dr Chris Cummins (University of Edinburgh). English Faculty Building, ground floor, TBC. Thursday 30 January 2020, 16:30-18:00 t-glottalling, flapping and pre-glottalisation in British Englishes: patterns in phonological and social variabilityThere will be a tea and coffee reception from 4pm. Danielle Turton (Lancaster University). English Faculty Building, TBC. Thursday 05 December 2019, 16:30-18:00 Language dynamics - what we hear and how we hear itThere will be a tea reception from 4pm. Prof. Anita Mehta (University of Oxford). English Faculty Building, SR-24 (second floor). Thursday 30 May 2019, 16:30-18:00 Driving a wedge between communication and language learning in autismThere will be a coffee reception from 4pm. Prof Mikhail Kissine (Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium). Faculty of Divinity, Lecture Room 2. Thursday 23 May 2019, 16:30-17:30 The interaction between simplicity and naturalness in nominal word order typologyThere will be a tea reception from 4pm. Dr Jennifer Culbertson (University of Edinburgh). English Faculty Building, GR-05 (ground floor). Thursday 25 April 2019, 16:30-18:00 Seeking cross-linguistic interaction in the phonetic and phonological development of bilingual French-speaking childrenThere will be a tea reception from 4pm. Dr Margaret Kehoe (University of Geneva) . Gr-06/7 (English Faculty Building). Thursday 21 February 2019, 16:30-18:00 Getting the gist: experience and expectation in the interpretation of novel compound nounsThere will be a tea reception from 4pm. Dr Melaine Bell (Anglia Ruskin University) . Gr-06/7 (English Faculty Building). Thursday 14 February 2019, 16:30-18:00 The Evolutionary Typology of Verbal Person-Number IndexesThere will be a tea reception from 4pm. Dr Ilja Seržant (University of Leipzig). Gr-06/7 (English Faculty Building). Thursday 07 February 2019, 16:30-18:00 Syntactic Change in Postcolonial Englishes: Substrates and InputProf Devyani Sharma (Queen Mary University of London). English Faculty Building, 2nd Floor, Room 24, 9 West Road, Sidgwick Site.. Thursday 31 May 2018, 16:00-17:30 Linguistics and education: a case of mutual dependency?Prof Richard 'Dick' Hudson. English Faculty Lecture Room GR-06/07, 9 West Road, Sidgwick Site.. Thursday 26 April 2018, 16:00-17:30 Understanding Ellipsis: Corpus, Annotation, TheoryNote: This is a special out-of-term session. Note unusual time (Monday instead of Thursday) Prof. Jim McCloskey (University of California, Santa Cruz). English Faculty Lecture Room GR-06/07, 9 West Road, Sidgwick Site.. Monday 26 March 2018, 16:00-17:30 Sources of Variability in Language Activation and Control in Spanish/English bilinguals and L2 learnersTeresa Bajo, Center for Mind, Brain and Behaviour, University of Granada. English Faculty Lecture Room GR-06/07, 9 West Road, Sidgwick Site.. Thursday 01 March 2018, 16:00-17:30 The semantics and pragmatics of racial and ethnic language: Towards a comprehensive radical contextualist accountDr. Roberto B. Sileo (University of Cambridge). English Faculty Lecture Room GR-06/07, 9 West Road, Sidgwick Site.. Thursday 15 February 2018, 16:00-17:30 Using quantile regression and dynamic survival analysis to study the time course of the lexical processing of complex wordsHarald Baayen (University of Tübingen). English Faculty Lecture Room GR-06/07, 9 West Road, Sidgwick Site.. Thursday 01 February 2018, 16:00-17:30 Languages adapt to minute differences in their speakers’ ecologyFreek Van de Velde (University of Leuven). English Faculty Lecture Room GR-06/07, 9 West Road, Sidgwick Site.. Thursday 18 January 2018, 16:00-17:30 Please see above for contact details for this list. |
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