Talk by Janika Kunzmann (Mainz University) in the Phonology Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Janika Kunzmann in the Phonology Colloquium. Room: IG 4.301 Date: Wednesday November 5th Time: 17-18 st. Title: On the tonal system of Mbum - Insights from fieldwork in Cameroon Abstract:  This talk presents preliminary insights from an ongoing study of the tonal system of Mbum, a Cameroon- Ubangian language spoken in Cameroon. Drawing on data collected through both on-site and remote fieldwork conducted as part of a doctoral project in descriptive linguistics, the presentation examines key features of Mbum’s tonal system, including a two-level tonal contrast, the presence of various toneless elements, polarity rules, and instances of grammatical tone, as well as how these phenomena are approached in this study. The talk further discusses the challenges and strategies involved in preparing and organizing fieldwork data from scratch for tonal analysis. Overall, it aims to offer a window into the methods, approaches, and preliminary findings that shape a fieldwork-based tonal study of a little-documented and hardly accessible...
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Talk by Cécile Meier (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Cécile Meier (Frankfurt) 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: October 30, 2025 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm c.t. Title: Word-level TAM: the case of German Adjectives ending on „-lich“ Abstract:  I am going to present onging work from Project A02, a part of CRC 1629 NegLab. In the literature, there are different types of classifications mentioned for adjectives ending on „-lich“ in German. They differ in voice (active/passive), in modal force (necessity/possibility) and wrt actuality entailments (Bhatt, Hacquard on „be able to"). I am going to argue that „-lich“ lexicalizes parts of the clausal spine (TAM). Top down: The difference in actuality entailments follows from the assumption of a temporal  habituality operator that heads all the other nodes (Paslawska/von Stechow). Modals are interpreted force variable (Rullmann et al.). And voice is related to a difference in point-of-view aspect (imperfective/perfective, Rapp). Affixal negation may intervene between the habitually operator and the modal meaning component. The theoretical account of structural enrichment below the word-level follows the LF architecture for times and events (Beck/von Stechow)....
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Talk by Camila Antônio Barros (Berlin) and Vinicius Macuch-Silva (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Camila Antônio Barros (Berlin) and Vinicius Macuch-Silva (Frankfurt) 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: October 23, 2025 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm c.t. Title: Time commitment: ways gesture can be placed in time Abstract:  In this talk, we discuss different types of synchrony between gesture and speech, an issue that has been at the center of work on gesture-speech coordination. Based on McNeill (1992), we present an empirical investigation of how gesture and speech can be synchronized at the phonological, semantic, and pragmatic levels, drawing on a corpus study as well as on an experimental study. In the corpus study, we investigate the overlap between gesture and speech in Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese, looking at representationality and the synchrony of gesture relative to phonological anchors. The results show that the overlap between a word and a stroke...
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Talk by Lennart Fritzsche (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Lennart Fritzsche (Frankfurt) 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: July 24, 2025 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm c.t. Title: Modified head nods as a window into gradable assertion Abstract:  An interlocutor who asserts a proposition p takes on responsibility for its truth (Krifka, 2014; Viebahn, 2021). Commitment-based approaches to assertion propose that such commitments can be gradable (Marsili, 2014; Greenberg & Wolf, 2018). For example, intensified response particles such as Hebrew legamrey! ('absolutely!') express maximal commitment, whereas German voll! (lit. 'full!') conveys high but non-maximal commitment (Gotzner, 2022). Yet, experimental evidence for gradable commitment in assertions remains scarce. In this talk, I present experimental data from visual communication indicating that intensified head nods systematically influence perceived speaker commitment. Building on Greenberg and Wolf’s (2018) gradable analysis of the ASSERT operator, I outline a preliminary analysis accommodating visual...
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Talk by Jonas Grünke (Regensburg University) in the Phonology Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Jonas Grünke in the Phonology Colloquium. Room: IG 4.301 Date: Wednesday July 16th Time: 16-18 ct Title: When intonation meets intonation: Evidence from Catalan-Spanish bilingualism and other contact settings Abstract:  Language contact often leads to mutual influence, with prosody frequently said to be particularly susceptible to such effects. However, detailed studies on prosodic transfer remain relatively scarce. In this talk, I examine intonational influence between Catalan and Spanish, showing how both languages shape each other prosodically in bilingual speakers. I argue that current patterns of variation can only be understood when taking into account language dominance in these speakers’ repertoires. In addition to this case study, I will discuss further examples of prosodic contact effects in minority and heritage languages (e.g., Judeo-Spanish) as well as in third language acquisition (L3 French), aiming to contribute to a more nuanced understanding of prosody in multilingual settings....
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