Talk by Carolin Reinert (Frankfurt)

We are happy to announce a talk by Carolin Reinert (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium. The talk will take place on campus in IG 4.301. Title: Investigating local readings of adjectives  Date: April 27, 2023 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct Abstract: In this talk, I would like to report on the last chapter of my dissertation. In my dissertation I investigate the hypothesis that all adjective noun constructions involving local adjectives can be interpreted intersectively. This excludes non-local readings allowed by certain adnominal adjectives like possible, wrong and occasional (Larson, 2000; Schwarz 2006, 2020; Morzycki 2016). In previous talks in the colloquium, I addressed certain aspects of adjectives like skillful and argued for an analysis of these adjectives as context-dependent predicates. As a result, an intersective analysis is possible for such adjectives. However, there are further types of adjectives that are also local (in the sense of Schwarz 2020), but cannot receive an intersective analysis: temporal adjectives like former and modal adjectives like alleged. In this talk, I will...
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Talk by Volker Struckmeier (Frankfurt)

We are happy to announce a talk by Volker Struckmeier (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium. The talk will take place on campus in IG 4.301. Title: The many factors of ellipsis reconstruction – a multi-layered model Date: April 20, 2023 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct Abstract: Many theories try to explain the phenomenon of ellipsis interpretation and formation from the viewpoint of (mostly) single levels of linguistic description. All of these models have certain strong points.These successes in deriving empirical properties in ellipsis, in turn, makes their adherents attempt to specify more and more analytical restrictions and options in essentially the same framework, and with the same theoretical vocabulary, which yielded the initial advances. I will argue in this talk, that we should avoid overly specific analyses in which all (or almost all) relevant ellipsis descriptions stem from too few linguistic levels of representation. Instead of such single-level theories, I will propose an approach to ellipsis analysis which tries to combine strong points from each approach in a multi-layered...
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