September 30, 2020

New paper: Konnelly (2020)

Lex Konnelly (Ph.D.) has a new paper in Language and Communication, 75: "Brutoglossia: Democracy, authenticity, and the enregisterment of connoisseurship in 'craft beer talk'."

Building on Silverstein's (2003, 2016) oinoglossia (wine talk), this paper argues for a closely related genre: brutoglossia, (craft) beer talk. Drawing on a corpus of craft beer and brewery descriptions from Toronto, Canada, I argue that the appropriation of wine terminology and tasting practices (re)configures beer brewers and drinkers as ‘elite’ and ‘classy.’ The ‘specialist’ lexical and morphosyntactic components of wine discourse provide the higher order of indexicality through which the emergent technical beer terminology is to be interpreted. Together, the descriptions can be read as fields of indexicalities, mapping linguistic and semiotic variables associated with a particular social object: beer. 

September 28, 2020

Congratulations, Nicholas!

Congratulations to Nicholas Rolle (MA 2010, now at Princeton University), who has accepted a postdoctoral fellowship at the Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft in Berlin!

September 25, 2020

Congratulations, Marisa and Nathan!

The Linguistics Graduate Course Union has announced their annual awards for Excellence in TA Supervision for 2019-20. This year, the award recognizes Marisa Brook (faculty), with an honorable mention to Nathan Sanders (faculty). Congratulations to both!

September 23, 2020

New paper: Lima and Martins (2020)

Suzi Lima (faculty) and Adriana Leitão Martins (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro) have a paper out in the Journal of Portuguese Linguistics, 19(1): "Aspectual information of durativity/punctuality impacts the countability of deverbal nouns in Brazilian Portuguese."

This paper explores the countability of deverbal bare singular nouns in Brazilian Portuguese, such as chute ‘kick’ in Maria deu mais chute ‘Maria did more kicking/Maria did more kicks’. More specifically, it investigates whether the aspectual information of a verb impacts the count (cardinal interpretation) or mass (volume/intensity interpretation) interpretation of a bare singular noun. Based on the results of a forced choice task replicating Barner, Wagner, and Snedeker (2008) for English, we show that deverbal bare singulars in Brazilian Portuguese allow count and mass interpretations, depending on the aspectual features of the verbs they are derived from. Punctual events were more likely than durative events to be associated with a cardinal/count response. These results corroborate previous analysis of bare singulars in Brazilian Portuguese, whereby these nouns allow both count and mass interpretations (Pires de Oliveira and Rothstein 2011b).

September 22, 2020

Research Groups: Friday, September 25

10:00 AM - 11:30 AM: Psycholinguistics Group
Presentation by Nayoun Kim (postdoc).

11:30 AM - 1:00 PM: Phonetics/Phonology Research Group
Elan Dresher (faculty): "Foundations of contrastive hierarchy theory."

I will present a brief introduction to a theory of contrastive feature hierarchies in phonology. This theory builds on ideas that go back to the early days of modern phonology, to the work of Henry Sweet and Edward Sapir. Most directly, the theory adapts proposals by Roman Jakobson and N. S. Trubetzkoy to the generative framework of Noam Chomsky and Morris Halle. The first part of this talk will be a historical review of these sources. In the second part I will set out the main tenets of Contrastive Hierarchy Theory (CHT) and consider what implications they have for our understanding of phonological features. I will show how contrastive feature hierarchies contribute to illuminating analyses of synchronic and diachronic phonology.

1:00 PM - 2:00 PM: Syntax Group
Andrew Peters (Ph.D.): "Is the Mongolian complementizer gejü really a complementizer?"

The Mongolian complementizer gejü is formed from a verb of saying and the imperfective converbial marker -jü. It is not uncommon for verbs of saying used in quotative constructions to become grammaticalized as general complementizers (cf. e.g. Japanese toiu). However, Mongolian gejü maintains some features of its adjunct-y origins: the clauses it subordinates can only appear in what superficially (putatively?) look like verbal complements, and not in subject or PP complement positions; it is entirely un-utilised in relative clauses; it appears in some aspectual constructions e.g. producing prospective aspect. Also, while the verbal root ge- is rarely used as a matrix verb of speech in the modern language, it can be used in other non-finite forms such as the habitual masdar.  Is gejü actually a fully grammaticalized complementizer with some quirky restrictions, and the other uses are separate productive instances of a homophonous verb root that just happens to share historical origins with gejü? Or is gejü still a fully verbal form, and the complementizer analysis has simply been taken for granted since it was asserted by some Eurocentric German philologists (Ramstedt and Poppe) in the first half of the 20th century? I don't know! However, I would like to show you some data and compare these complement clauses with nominalized ones in the language, and maybe get some advice on what to look into.

September 16, 2020

Talk by Nathan, Lex, and Pocholo for Arts and Science

For the 'Teaching and Learning Community of Practice' series hosted by Arts and Science, Nathan Sanders (faculty), Lex Konnelly (Ph.D.), and Pocholo Umbal (Ph.D.) are giving an online presentation on Tuesday, September 22, from 2 PM to 3:15 PM, based on the ongoing LEAF-funded project in our department: "Building equity, diversity, and inclusion in courses: A case study in linguistics." There will also be ample time for discussion. To register to attend, visit the link.

In linguistics courses, language-related biases can surface in many forms, affecting the choice of course material (especially linguistic data), how that material is presented, and how instructors interact with students. We began a three-year project in September 2019 to address some of these biases in the linguistics classroom, with the ultimate goal of generalizing the methods and materials to other fields.

In this session, we present some preliminary results of this project from the first year in various linguistics courses, including new course content on the relationship of phonetics to gender, race and sign languages; new problem sets featuring data from under-represented languages; and workshops on inclusive classroom practices. We will also discuss paths forward for creating more affirming classrooms beyond linguistics, especially in fields where issues of language can play a central role (English, psychology, etc.).

September 14, 2020

Research Groups: Friday, September 18

Note that all groups are meeting online until otherwise indicated; see the emails from group administrators for links and for further details. Also note that subsequent meetings of the Fieldwork Group this semester will be in the afternoon time-slot instead (1 PM - 2:30 PM).

10:00 AM - 11:30 AM: Language Variation and Change Research Group
Jeremy Needle
(postdoc): "Two computational studies of lexical knowledge in te reo Māori in NZ."

The two studies presented in this talk demonstrate our efforts with computational and experimental approaches to replicate and extend traditional formal descriptions of te reo Māori. In the first study, we compare wordlikeness ratings for words and non-words to gradient phonotactic scores based on subsets of the lexicon derived from spoken and written corpora. In additional to deriving a gradient probabilistic description of Māori phonotactics which extends prior phonological work, we find that non-Māori-speaking New Zealanders demonstrate wordlikeness knowledge of Māori which suggests form-only familiarity with about 2000 morphemes. The importance of morphology in the lexical model for this study spurred us toward the second study: a quantitative survey of morphological patterns in Māori which combines knowledge from expert informants with machine-learning morphological parsing models. Among our findings, we particularly note that our native-speaker informants do not appear sensitive to the same taxonomy of reduplication patterns that appear in traditional grammars.

11:30 AM - 1:00 PM: Fieldwork Group
Introductions and group discussion of developing elicitation materials.

1:00 PM - 2:30 PM: Semantics Research Group
1. Angelika Kiss (Ph.D.): "Question tags projecting sourcehood in Italian."

Question tags like isn't it or right? in English can serve the purpose of eliciting confirmation or acknowledgment from the addressee. In Italian, no?, o sbaglio? and vero? have such a function, but there is another tag in its inventory, eh?, which is subject to further restrictions. In addition to elicit the addressee's acknowledgment/confirmation, eh? also conveys evidential meaning. When a tag question hosts eh?, the speaker conveys i) that the addressee is independently committed to the proposition conveyed by the anchor (p), and presupposes ii) that the speaker knows i) from a direct source. That is, a question like Buono, eh? 'It's tasty, EH?', is pronounced felicitously in a context where the speaker directly perceives an event where the addressee has direct evidence for the truth of p (i.e., that whatever the addressee is eating, the addressee finds it tasty). Acknowledging a tag question like Buono, eh? results in registering p as a projected independent commitment of the addressee on the scoreboard of Farkas and Roelofsen (2012).

2. Michela Ippolito (faculty): "Gestures and the semantics of non-canonical questions."

I argue that both the co-speech and pro-speech symbolic gesture MAT (mano a tulipano) used by native speakers of Italian characterizes non-canonical wh-questions. MAT can be executed with either a fast tempo contour or a slow tempo contour. Tempo is semantically significant: descriptively, a fast tempo characterizes a biased but information-seeking non-canonical question; a slow tempo characterizes a rhetorical non-canonical question. I argue that the fast contour is the default tempo of MAT and that it brings about a biased interpretation. Slowing down the movement occurs when the feature [slow] is added: the semantic contribution of this feature is to add the presupposition that the question is resolved in the conversational context. This results in generalizing the speaker's bias to all discourse participants. More generally, I aim to show that both modalities (speech and gesture) can be analyzed and modelled using the same linguistic tools and principles.

September 12, 2020

AMP 2020

The 2020 Annual Meeting on Phonology is taking place online from September 18 through 20, hosted by the University of California, Santa Cruz. Note that registration is free but will close on September 13.

Current members of the department who are presenting:

  • Koorosh Ariyaee (Ph.D.) and Peter Jurgec (faculty): "Variable hiatus in Persian is affected by suffix length."
  • Alexei Kochetov (faculty), along with Jason Shaw (Yale University), Sejin Oh (CUNY Graduate Center), and Karthik Durvasula (Michigan State University): "Distinguishing complex segments from consonant clusters using gestural coordination."
  • Peter Jurgec (faculty) is also co-presenting a poster with Jesse Zymet (University of California, Berkeley): "Slovenian speakers learn the lexical propensities of individual affixes."

Alumni:

  • Fulang Cater Chen (MA 2017, now at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology): "On the left-/right-branching asymmetry in Mandarin Tone 3 sandhi."
  • Gloria Mellesmoen (MA 2016, now at the University of British Columbia) and Suzanne Urbanczyk (University of Victoria): "Binarity in prosodic morphology and elsewhere."
  • Nicholas Rolle (MA 2010, now at Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft) and John Merrill (Princeton University): "Tone-driven vowel epenthesis is possible: Evidence from Wamey."

In addition, please note that next year's Annual Meeting on Phonology will be co-hosted by the University of Toronto and York University. It will be held online from October 1 through 3, 2021.

September 11, 2020

Experiments in Linguistic Meaning 1

The first Experiments in Linguistic Meaning (ELM 1) is being held online from September 16 through 18, hosted by the University of Pennsylvania. This new conference investigates experimental approaches to theoretical semantics and pragmatics.
  • Suzi Lima (faculty) is giving an invited talk: "Defining atoms: a view from Brazilian languages."

And several alumni are involved with presentations:

  • Ailís Cournane (Ph.D. 2015, now at New York University) with Anouk Dieuleveut (University of Maryland) and Valentine Hacquard (University of Maryland): "Finding the force: A novel word learning experiment with modals."
  • Naomi Francis (MA 2014 and recent faculty, now at the University of Oslo) with Leo Rosenstein (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Martin Hackl (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), and Shuli Jones (Massachusetts Institute of Technology): "On the acquisition of either and too."
  • Giuseppe Ricciardi (MA 2016, now at Harvard University)with Rachel A. Ryskin (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and Ted Gibson (Massachusetts Institute of Technology): "Epistemic 'must p' is literally a strong statement."

September 8, 2020

New paper: Kochetov and Arsenault (2019)

Alexei Kochetov (faculty) and Paul Arsenault (Ph.D. 2012, now at Tyndale University College) have a paper available in the Journal of South Asian Languages and Linguistics, 6(2): "Kalasha affricates: An acoustic analysis of place contrasts." 

Affricates are not uncommon in consonant inventories of world languages. However, most languages have affricates at a single place of articulation (e. g. postalveolars /ʧ, ʤ/; Maddieson 1984). In Maddieson and Precoda’s (1990) sample of 451 languages, only 18% of them have affricates at two places, and just 3% have affricates at three places. The latter group includes Burushaski (isolate), Jaqaru (Aymaran), Mandarin Chinese (Sino-Tibetan), and Mazatec (Oto-Manguean), where affricates contrast at the dental/alveolar, retroflex, and alveolopalatal places of articulation. Kalasha and other Indo-Iranian (Indo-Aryan and Nuristani) languages of the Hindu-Kush region are not part of this sample, but they exhibit equally complex place contrasts in affricates, which are not characteristic of other Indo-Iranian languages. For instance, Kalasha features a three-way place contrast (dental, retroflex, and alveolopalatal) with four laryngeal qualities: voiceless unaspirated, voiceless aspirated, voiced, and breathy voiced. Such complex feature combinations are highly unusual in affricates, being reported in only two cases in Maddieson and Precoda’s sample: Naxi (Sino-Tibetan) and Hmong (Hmong-Mien). In this paper we examine properties of the typologically rare set of affricates in Kalasha, focusing on the acoustic realization of place across various laryngeal contrasts and syllable positions. Our results demonstrate that the three-way place contrast in Kalasha affricates is robustly distinguished by noise spectra during burst/frication and by formant transitions during adjacent vowels, while showing some variation across different laryngeal classes. These results extend the phonetic typology of coronal place contrasts, highlighting some general and language-specific aspects of the phonetic realization of affricates. In addition, the results of the study contribute to the general phonetic documentation of Kalasha, the language of a culturally and linguistically threatened community of Northern Pakistan (Rahman 2006; Khan and Heegård Petersen 2016).

September 1, 2020

Sinn und Bedeutung 25

Sinn und Bedeutung 25 is taking place online, co-hosted by University College London and Queen Mary University of London, from September 3 through 9. Special sessions are being held in the two days before that.

  • Angelika Kiss (Ph.D.) and Roger Yu-Hsiang Lo (University of British Columbia) are presenting a talk: "Rhetorical wh-questions differing in inquisitiveness: Support from Mandarin prosody."
  • Naomi Francis (MA 2014 and recent faculty, now at the University of Oslo) is giving a talk at the associated workshop on Gestures and Natural Language Semantics: "Objecting to discourse moves with gestures."