Calgary Working Papers in Linguistics, Volume 12, Summer 1986

Download
Accessioned
2016-06-16T19:29:46ZAvailable
2016-06-16T19:29:46ZIssued
1986-06Subject
LinguisticsJapanese language
Language acquisition
Syntax
Grammar, Comparative and general--Pronoun
Pampanga language
Morphology
Focus (Linguistics)
Grammar, Comparative and general--Ergative constructions
Markedness (Linguistics)
Phonology
Uto-Aztecan languages
Luiseño language
Phonetics
English language
French language
German language
Intonation (Phonetics)
Accent, Foreign
Hungarian language
Semantics
Scope (Linguistics)
Grammar, Comparative and general--Quantifiers
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
This is the twelfth in the series of working papers published by LOGOS, the Student Linguistics Society at the University of Calgary. These papers represent the current research in progress of students and faculty members and as such should not be considered in any way final or definitive. Appearance of papers in this volume does not preclude their publication in another form elsewhere.Refereed
YesCitation
Byma, G., & Hildebrand, J. L. (Eds.) (1986). Calgary Working Papers in Linguistics, 12(Summer).Department
LinguisticsFaculty
ArtsInstitution
University of CalgaryPublisher
University of CalgaryCollections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Mechanisms of language change constraints on reinterpretation processes as evidenced in particle reinterpretation data from Homeric Greek
Caswell, Cynthia (University of Calgary, Arts, Linguistics, University of Calgary, 1992-09)Lightfoot (1980) claims that the mechanism for syntactic change, reinterpretation, lacks constraints. An in depth study of particle reinterpretation in Ancient Greek will be presented to demonstrate semantic constraints ... -
Focus marking in a language lacking pragmatic presuppositions
Koch, Karsten A (University of Calgary, Arts, Linguistics, University of Calgary, 2011-09)This study investigates the effect of a language-wide lack of pragmatic resuppositions on focus marking (often taken to be inherently presuppositional). The language of investigation is Nɬeʔkepmxcin (Thompson River Salish). ... -
The autosegmental distinction of tonal language types: with specific reference to Chilcotin tone phenomena
Owens, Camille (University of Calgary, Arts, Linguistics, University of Calgary, 1991-09)A distinction has been drawn in phonology between two types of languages which exhibit tone phenomena. Languages are traditionally categorized as pitch accent or tone languages. Proponents of autosegmental phonology have ...