Talk by Kurt Erbach (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Kurt Erbach (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium. The talk will take place on campus in IG 4.301. Title: (Non-)Existence entailments of predicates (joined work with Dolf Rami) Date: October 26, 2023 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct Abstract: Object mass nouns like "furniture" and "equipment" are a focal point of countability research because they refer to intuitively countable objects but grammatically pattern with nouns that don't: "mud", "concrete", etc. One of the primary ways in which theories of countabiltiy differ is in their treatment of object denotation (as opposed to substance denotation) and how this interacts with other semantic operations. Despite all of these assumptions, little experimental work has been done on the conditions under which object mass nouns are acquired. This talk presents several experiments designed to test how it is that object mass nouns are acquired....
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Talk by Anke Himmelreich (GU) in the Syntax Colloquium

We are happy to announce a talk by Anke Himmelreich (GU) in the Syntax Colloquium. The talks will take place in person. Room IG 4.301 Date: October 23, 2023 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct Title: A cross-linguistic study on the structure of disjunction   Abstract: In this talk, I will present ideas and an outline of my planned project on the structure of disjunction. The project should have two general areas that together aim for developing a more comprehensive understanding of the morphosyntax of disjunctive structures. The first area targets agreement with disjunctive noun phrases. In this area, the goal is to see how agreement with disjunctions works and whether or not we see differences to agreement with conjunctions. For this, a large cross-linguistic study is planned to achieve a broader database for the theoretical investigation in the second part: Here, the goal is to tie in the findings of the first part with state-of-the-art theories of agreement and coordination to investigate the general structure...
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Two talks by Samuel Atintono (Accra College of Education) and Samuel A. Issah (University of Education Winneba) in the Syntax Colloquium

We are happy to announce two talks by Samuel Atintono (Accra College of Education) and Samuel A. Issah (University of Education Winneba) in the Syntax Colloquium. The talks will take place in person. Room IG 4.301 Date: July 10, 2023 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct Titles: Weak pronoun placement and post verbal particles: A case of object shift in Mabia (Samuel Atintono)               Inaudible syntax in Mabia: The case of fragmentary answers in Dagbani and Gurenɛ (Samuel A. Issah)   Abstracts: Weak pronoun placement and post verbal particles: A case of object shift in Mabia (Samuel A. Atintono) In this presentation, we explore the distribution of the postverbal particles la/mi and la/mɛ for Dagbani and Gurenɛ, two Mabia languages spoken in Northern Ghana. We show that they are full DPs and weak pronouns behave different in the syntax regarding the distribution of these verbal particles. Thus, while the la particle of both Dagbani and Gurenɛ requires an overt DP or an...
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Talks by Julien Foglietti (Frankfurt) and Kathryn Barnes (Frankfurt)

We are happy to announce two talks by Julien Foglietti (Frankfurt) and Kathryn Barnes (Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium. The talk will take place on campus in IG 4.301. Date: July 6, 2023 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct   Julien Foglietti Title: What’s in a last name? Semantics and experimental update Abstract: In this talk I will present further support to my proposal that last names used referentially carry a family membership presupposition. In the first section, I will walk us through the presupposition tests (Karttunen, 1973) applied to the use of referential last names. I will also introduce a new experimental design – inspired by Tonhauser (2012) – which will bring experimental support to my proposal.  In the second section of the talk, I will present the results of my previous experiments. These results show that; indeed, the notion of family membership is linked with how we use last names in referential expressions. Furthermore, these results will also open the question of how the content of the presupposition that...
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Two talks by Liyang Ye (GU) and Abdul-Razak Sulemana (University of Ghana) in the Syntax Colloquium

We are happy to announce two talks by Liyang Ye (GU) and Abdul-Razak Sulemana (University of Ghana) in the Syntax Colloquium. The talks will take place in person. Room IG 4.301 Date: July 03, 2023 Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct Titles: Topicality in Chinese (Liyang Ye) & The finite / non-finite distinction in Buli (Abdul-Razak Sulemana)...
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