Crosslinguistic Research in Syntax and Semantics: Crosslinguistic Research in Syntax and Semantics
Author
: Raffaella Zanuttini and Héctor Campos, Elena Herburger, and Paul H. Portner
Subject
: Grammar, Comparative and general—Clauses—Congresses, Grammar, Comparative
and general—Negatives—Congresses, Grammar, Comparative and general—Tense—
Congresses, Grammar,Comparative and general—Syntax—Congresses, Semantics Congresses.
Publisher
: Georgetown University Press
Summary :This volume in the 2004 Georgetown University Round Table on Languages and
Linguistics (GURT) series comes from the conference that took place March 26–29,
2004, with the theme Comparative and Crosslinguistic Research in Syntax, Semantics,
and Computational Linguistics. While the conference was open to any research
within this broad theme, the conference announcement noted that presentations focusing
on the following issues were especially welcome: the syntax and semantics of
clause types; syntactic variation across varieties of English; the internal structure of
the noun phrase; negation, negative polarity, and negative concord; tense and aspect
in formal and/or computational semantics; microvariation in the left periphery of the
clause; and linguistic typology for machine translation.
The main session in the conference had space for thirty-two presentations chosen
from 126 submitted abstracts, in addition to seven presentations by the following
invited speakers: Paola Benincà, Marcel den Dikken, Liliane Haegeman, James Mc-
Closkey, Toshiyuki Ogihara, Colin Phillips, and Henriëtte de Swart. The presentations
were evenly chosen from the abstracts submitted in the areas of syntax and
semantics, with a small number in computational linguistics (reflecting the small
number of abstract submissions in this area). In addition to the talks in the regular
sessions, other conference events included two well-attended poster sessions, where
twenty-four posters were displayed; a lively panel discussion on methodological
issues in the study of English dialects, led by Judy Bernstein (William Paterson
University), Ralph Fasold (Georgetown University), Simanique Moody (New York
University), and Christina Tortora (College of Staten Island, CUNY); a tutorial
on computational tools for linguists, organized and conducted by Inderjeet Mani
(Georgetown University); and a postconference workshop on clause typing and the
left periphery, which included the presentation of six papers and ample time for
discussion.
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