Talks by Sebastian Walter (Frankfurt) and Lennart Fritzsche (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium

We are happy to announce talks by Sebastian Walter (Frankfurt) and Lennart Fritzsche (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium. The talks will take place on campus in IG 4.301. If you wish to participate virtually via Zoom, please contact Lennart Fritzsche for the link.  Date: June 6, 2024 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct    Sebastian Walter (first half of the session) Title: Viewpoint matters: Prototypical vs. non-prototypical co-speech gestures in the VP domain (joint work with Cornelia Ebert and Stefan Hinterwimmer) Abstract: In this talk, Ebert et al.’s (2020) theory of the semantic contribution of co-speech gestures is extended to the VP domain. We investigate the distinction between what we call prototypical and non-prototypical co-speech gestures in that domain. Prototypical gestures in general resemble the prototypical concept they depict (in the case of (1), for example, waving with one hand). Non-prototypical gestures, by contrast, can be seen as modified alternatives of a prototypical gesture that are interpreted completely iconic (in (1), e.g., waving with both hands). Crucially, an instance...
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Talk by Ruby Sleeman (Institute of Mediterranean Studies) & Nicolas Lamoure (Goethe University)

We are happy to announce a talk by Ruby Sleeman (Institute of Mediterranean Studies) & Nicolas Lamoure (Goethe University) in the Historical Linguistics Colloquium. Date: Tuesday, May 28, 2024 Room: IG 2.201 Time: 2 pm – 4 pm ct Title: "F*cking with nouns, not f*cking with verbs" Abstract: This study expands on previous literature on borrowing curse words from English into other languages (ten Buuren et al. 2018, Vatvedt Fjeld et al. 2019, Zenner et al. 2017, a.o.) and focuses on the syntactic distribution of the borrowed adjective/adverb fucking in the goal languages Dutch and German. We created 2000 token random samples (Kilgariff et al. 2004, 2014) for both Dutch (using nlTenTen20) and German (using deTenTen20), which we handsorted and contrasted with a random sample of 2000 handsorted results for English (enTenTen21). Despite a handful of instances of verbal modification, the overwhelming amount of hits pertained to adjectival, adverbial and nominal modification. Why does the modifier fucking occur freely with nouns, adjectives, and verbs in English, but...
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Talk by Janek Guerrini (Paris) in the Semantics Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Janek Guerrini (Paris) in the Semantics Colloquium. The talk will take place on campus in IG 4.301. If you wish to participate virtually via Zoom, please contact Lennart Fritzsche for the link.  Date: May 2, 2024 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct Title: Distributive kind predication Abstract: Germanic bare plurals and Romance definite plurals are thought to be kind-denoting, as they provide suitable arguments for predicates that hold of kinds (Carlson, 1977), as in e.g. ‘lions are extinct’. Kinds are standardly seen as intensional sums. In this work, I argue that, if we extend to kind-denoting plurals tools independently motivated by the treatment of referential plurals, a number of puzzles concerning the distribution of kind-denoting plurals, both old and novel, fall in line. ...
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Talk by Ur Shlonsky (University of Geneva) in the Syntax Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Ur Shlonsky (University of Geneva) in the Syntax Colloquium. The talks will take place in person. Room IG 4.301 Date: February 05, 2024 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct Title: "Clause-internal focus - movement and locality: Evidence from some African and some non-African languages” Abstract: I present several arguments in favor of a clause-internal (“vP-peripheral”) FocusP and provide some examples of movement to its specifier. Focus°, I additionally argue, is selected by a head. I discuss the properties of this additional structure and its role in the syntactic computation....
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Talks by Sebastian Walter (Frankfurt/Wuppertal) and Noémi Ecsedi (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium

We are happy to announce talks by Sebastian Walter (Frankfurt/Wuppertal) and Noémi Ecsedi (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium. The talks will take place on campus in IG 4.301. If you wish to participate virtually via Zoom, please contact Lennart Fritzsche for the link.  Date: February 1, 2024 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct   Sebastian Walter Title: Indirect discourse as mixed quotation: Evidence from self pointing Abstract: Indirect discourse, e.g., Peter said he was thirsty, is standardly viewed as a statement of what someone said or thought without quoting them directly. However, there are instances of indexicals which can receive a shifted interpretation in indirect discourse (Plank, 1986; Anderson, 2019), meaning that they are interpreted from the matrix subject’s perspective. This suggests that at least some elements in indirect discourse can be quoted. In a rating study, self pointing gestures aligned with a focalized third-person pronoun in indirect discourse were judged acceptable, cf. (1). (1) Peter complained that [HE] again had to pay the bill for the whole group. + self...
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