Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Program of the 11th International Morphology Meeting 2004, Vienna, 14.-17.2.2004 Mobile phone number during the meeting: +43-699-12417371 Friday, February 13, 2004 14.00 –19.00 19.00 Registration Welcome drink 10.30 – … Workshop Hippisley (Hörsaal 3) Saturday, February 14, 2004 8.00 – 9.00 9.00 – 9.30 9.30 – 10.30 10.30 –11.00 11.00 –11.30 11.30–12.00 12.00 –12.30 12.30 –13.00 13.00 –14.30 14.30 –15.30 15.30 –….. 16.30 –17.00 17.00 –17.30 17.30 –18.00 Registration Opening (Hörsaal 5) Geert Booij Syntax, compounding, and derivation: issues of demarcation. Hörsaal 5 Hörsaal 2 Paolo Acquaviva Torodd Kinn Constraining Inherent Inflection: Number and Abundance formations in -vis in the Scandinavian Nominal Aspect languages – derivation or inflection? Coffee break Janet Grijzenhout & Martina Penke Marina V.Rusakova The interaction of phonology and morphology in Russian diminutive/hypocoristic adjectives: between first language acquisition and Broca’s aphasia inflection and derivation Victoria A. Murphy & Elena Nicoladis Stela Manova What does a pull-rabbit mean to EnglishDerivation versus inflection in three inflecting speaking children? languages Vera Kempe, Patricia J. Brooks & Steven Sergey Say Antipassive –sja verbs in Russian: between inflection Gillis Diminutives provide multiple benefits for and word formation language acquisition Lunch break Bernd Heine Grammatical Hybrids: Between Serialization, Compounding and Derivation in !Xun (North Khoisan) Poster session Nino Amiridze Verb Forms inside Verb Forms. The Case of the Modern Spoken Georgian Proforms of the imaskna Type Yukiko Asano Adverbially interpreted non-adverbial morpheme in Japanese Elizabeth Athanasopoulou-Mela Adjectival Participles of Unaccusative Verbs. Evidence from Modern Greek Laurie Bauer The Borderline between Derivation and Compounding Gilles Boyé, Olivier Bonami & Françoise Kerleroux Stem Selection in Lexeme Formation : Evidence from French Antonio Fábregas On the Inadequacy of the Distinction between Inflection and Derivation: Evidence from Spanish Predicative Adverbs Tatjana Marvin Phases at word level: Slovenian participial nominalizations Olga Panić & Aleksandar Kavgić Burger, scape, gate, holic and the Like: Combining or Re-Combined Forms? Tvrtko Prćić & Gordana Lalić Towards a systematic distinction between prefixes and initial combining forms in English Maria Rio-Torto Graça Towards a gradient of inflection and derivation based on stress system(s). The Portuguese case Sergio Scalise, Antonietta Bisetto & Emiliano Guevara Selection in derivation and compounding Pavol Štekauer Compounding and Affixation: Any Difference? Coffee break Workshops 1) Ortmann/ Maria-Rosa Lloret Poster session Stolz (Hörsaal 3) Revising the phonological motivation for splitting the morphology 2) Savickienė / continued Davide Ricca Cumulative exponence involving derivation: some Dressler patterns for an uncommon phenomenon (Hörsaal 4) Sunday, February 15, 2004 Hörsaal 5 9.00 –10.00 10.00 -10.30 10.30 –11.00 11.00–11.30 11.30 –12.00 12.00 –12.30 12.30 –13.00 13.00 –14.30 Hörsaal 2 Martin Maiden When lexemes become allomorphs. On the genesis of suppletion S.J.Hannahs Dany Amiot Malagasy reduplication as infixation Between compounding and derivation: Elements of word formation corresponding to prepositions. Jenny Hayes, Victoria A. Murphy & Marianne Stone Speed and competition in English compound production Franca Ferrari-Bridgers V-N compound nouns, parasynthetic and agentive deverbal nouns as syntactic variations of an initial VP theme Coffee break Andrea Krott, Christina Gagné & Elena Mohamed Lahrouchi & Philippe Ségéral Nicoladis “Say it twice" A morphological analysis of a Berber Morphological family effects in compound Secret language acquisition Eva Smolka Laurence Labrune Defining the basic ingredients of regularity: the Truncation patterns of loanwords in Japanese: a corpusstorage and access of German participles in the based analysis mental lexicon C. Manouilidou, E. Kehayia & E. Rok Žaucer Slovenian/Slavic prefixes as morphemes with an event Schneiderman On the Processing of Thematic Features of value of State Deverbal Nouns Lunch break 14.30 – ….. Poster session Pier Marco Bertinetto & Georgi Jetchev Lexical access in Bulgarian: Adjectives with and without floating vowels Antony Dubach Green On the independence of phonology and morphology: the Celtic mutations Gonia Jarema, Laurie Feldman & Danuta Perlak Does Form Play a Role in the Recognition of Nouns in Polish? Juhani Järvikivi & Pirita Pyykkönen Processing morphologically ambiguous inflected words: An experimental study Masaaki Kamiya Word Formation, Category, and Internal Structures: an Argument for Distributed Morphology Sabine Lappe Predicting the unpredictable: Evidence from English prosodic morphology Elena Nicoladis & Robert Kirchner Phonological perceptibility determines inclusion of inflection in English compounds Thomas W. Stewart, Jr. Accept no substitutes: Conjunction and disjunction among Oneida prefixes Josef Šimandl The derivative morphology in Czech Vered Vaknin & Joseph Shimron Psychological aspects of plural inflections in Hebrew 15.30 –16.00 Salvador Valera Hernández & Laurie Bauer Poster session Conversion as a borderline between derivation continued and figurative extension Bernard Fradin On a semantically grounded difference between derivation and compounding Coffee break 16.00 –16.30 16.30 –17.00 17.00 –17.30 17.30 –18.00 Andrew Spencer Lexical relatedness in Generalized Paradigm Function Morphology Gregory T. Stump Delineating the boundary between inflection-class marking and derivational marking: The case of Sanskrit -aya Workshops 1) Ortmann / Stolz (Hörsaal 3) 2) Gavarró / Lleó (Hörsaal 4) Poster session Workshops continued continued Monday, February 16, 2004 Hörsaal 5 9.00 – 10.00 10.00 –10.30 10.30 –11.00 11.00–11.30 Hörsaal 2 Ingo Plag Who cares about syntactic category information? A new look at the morphology-syntax distinction Ali Idrissi & Eva Kehayia Anneke Neijt What’s in a Semitic Root? New functions for old endings – rhythm and semantics of linking elements in Dutch compounds Adam Ussishkin Heide Wegener A word-based model of Semitic The non syllabic linking elements of German - formal nonconcatenative templatic morphology and functional restrictions Coffee break 11.30 –12.00 12.00 –12.30 12.30 –13.00 13.00 –14.30 14.30 – … 15.30 –16.00 16.00 –16.30 16.30 –17.00 17.00 –17.30 20.00 Péter Rebrus & Miklós Törkenczy Paradigmatic contrast effects in Hungarian Sami Boudelaa & William Marslen-Wilson Limits on Abstractness: Insights from masked and cross-modal priming in Arabic Dorit Ravid Cutting across inflection and derivation: A developmental perspective on linear stem changes in Hebrew nominals Roland Pfau & Markus Steinbach Pluralization across modalities Mark Kaunisto The Interplay of Morphological Rivalry and Lexical Competition: adjectives ending in -ic/-ical Lunch break Poster session Carmen Aguirre What do overregularizations tell us about morphological knowledge? Hans Basbøll Word structure, prosody and inflectional patterns: nominal morphology in Danish revisited Stefania Biscetti The diachronic development of Italian evaluative suffixes Dagmar Bittner How autonomous are the different morphological domains of one language? W. U. Dressler, M. Kilani-Schoch, N. Gagarina, L. Pestal & M. Pöchtrager On the Typology of Inflection Class Systems Hans-Olav Enger Do affixes have meanings? Livio Gaeta On the double nature of productivity in inflectional morphology Dafna Graf Stem allomorphy in inflectional paradigms-implications for a theory of Semitic morphology Alain Kihm Internal plurals and verbal nouns in Standard Arabic Jasmina Miličević Clitics or Affixes? On the Morphological Status of the Future Tense Markers Teodor Petrič Acquisition of Slovene Verb Paradigms compared to German Elke Ronneberger-Sibold Different degrees of transparency in blends Coffee break Chiara Celata & Pier Marco Bertinetto Lexical access in Italian: words with and without palatalization Peter M. Arkadiev How the Case Hierarchy Constrains Case Syncretism Cross-Linguistically M. Baerman, G. Corbett, D. Brown, N. Evans & M. Mithun Extended deponency: the right morphology in the wrong place Poster session continued Cocktail reception at the city hall (“Rathaus”) Workshops 1) Ortmann / Stolz (Hörsaal 3) 2) Budin (Hörsaal 4) Tuesday, February 17, 2004 Hörsaal 5 9.00 –10.00 Hörsaal 2 Keren Rice Incorporates and preverbs in Athapaskan languages Corrien Blom The demarcation of morphology and syntax: a diachronic perspective on particle verbs 10.00 –10.30 David S.Rood Wichita Word Formation 10.30 –11.00 Douglas Ball A Hierarchical Proposal for the Wichita Verb 11.00–11.30 11.30 –12.00 12.00 –12.30 Coffee break Leonid Kulikov Object marking, (rise of) noun incorporation and the borders for the verbal paradigm Waltraud Paul Adjectival reduplication in Mandarin Chinese 12.30 –13.00 13.00 –14.30 14.30 –15.00 15.00 –15.30 15.30 –16.00 Wojciech Guz Semi-affixes – midway between words and affixes René Schiering The Evolution of Prepositional Definiteness Marking Baris Kabak Constraints on Becoming Bound Lunch break Tonjes Veenstra A diachronic analysis of synthetic compounds in the Surinamese Creoles: from compounding to derivation Maria Braun How to Create a Word-formation System in Two Hundred Years or What Happens to Derivational Morphology… Nihan F.Ketrez The plural morpheme in Turkish: A case of plurality marking across word boundary 16.00 Andrés Enrique-Arias On the prefixation of object agreement markers to Spanish finite verb forms Berthold Crysmann European Portuguese Cliticisation: Phrasal Affixation or Coanalysis? Michael Cysouw Why morphology? The rise of person-inflection out of independent pronouns, with special reference to the Munda Closing session Workshops: “Possible word” (Hörsaal 3) Andrew Hippisley Albert Ortmann / Thomas Stolz “Redundancy phenomena on the word and phrase level” (Hörsaal 3) www.fb10.uni-bremen.de/linguistik/stolz/tagungen/morphology Ineta Savickiene / W.U. Dressler “The acquisition of diminutives” Anna Gavarró / Conxita Lleó (Hörsaal 4) “Generative Approaches to the Acquisition of Morphology” (Hörsaal 4) http://seneca.uab.es/ggt/activitats.htm Gerhard Budin “Productivity in term formation strategies – a comparative view on domain-specific language development” (Hörsaal 4)