Theme sessions
A cross-linguistic perspective on the role of the lexicon in actionality, convenors: Thera Crane, Johanna Nichols, and Bastian Persohn
A cross-linguistic perspective on the role of the lexicon in actionality, convenors: Thera Crane, Johanna Nichols, and Bastian Persohn
- Walter Breu, The degree of temporal dynamics as the overall basis for aspect and actionality and their interaction
- Benidiktus Delpada and František Kratochvíl, The Role of the Lexicon in Aspectuality in Abui
- Andrej Malchukov, Actionality classes and aspectual hierarchies
- Johanna Mattissen, A cross-linguistic view on lexically inherent actional classes
- Leora Bar-El and Malin Petzell, On the application of actionality diagnostics across Bantu languages
- Jurica Polančec, Two-phase verbs: a crosslinguistic look at an actional class
- Anna Pompei, Accomplishment motion nouns and the selection of ‘to do’ or ‘to give’ in Latin and Romance languages light verbs
- Alexander Rostovtsev-Popiel, Dedicated (im)perfectives in Megrelian
Current research in phonological typology, convenors: Eitan Grossman and Steven Moran
Current research in phonological typology, convenors: Eitan Grossman and Steven Moran
- Cormac Anderson, Uses and misuses of the phoneme in phonological typology
- Kirsten Culhane, A typology of consonant/zero alternations
- Shelece Easterday, Expanding phonotactic typology: the role of morphological context
- Eitan Grossman, Dmitry Nikolaev, Elad Eisen, Ronén Júda, Schwartz Layla, Yoav Yosef and Steven Moran, The typology of phonological segment borrowing
- Tom Güldemann, Florian Lionnet, Alena Witzlack-Makarevich and Hirosi Nakagaw, Khoisan Phonological Typology database and the relative frequency of consonants in the Khoisan languages
- Nataliya Levkovych and Thomas Stolz, The phonological landscape of Europe in areal-typological perspective
- Dmitry Nikolaev, Sound changes and synchronic alternations: A comparative survey
- Erich Round, Canonical Phonology
- Inna Sieber, Assibilation typology (based on languages of Russia)
Lexical restrictions on grammatical relations in voice constructions, convenors: Eva van Lier and Alena Witzlack-Makarevich
Lexical restrictions on grammatical relations in voice constructions, convenors: Eva van Lier and Alena Witzlack-Makarevich
- Erika Bellingham, Juergen Bohnemeyer, Kazuhiro Kawachi, Yu Li, Alice Mitchell, Sang-Hee Park, Anastasia Stepanova, The semantic typology of causatives: new approaches to data collection and analysis
- Jeremy Bradley, András Czentnár and Nikolett F. Gulyás, Causatives and reflexives in the languages of the Volga-Kama region
- Isabelle Bril, Lexical restrictions on grammatical relations in Amis
- Atsuko Kanda Utsumi, Semantic Typology of Voice Systems in Western Malayo-Polynesian Languages
- Lunella Mereu and Valentina Piunno, A usage- and corpus-driven study of valency-changing and voice-related constructions in Italian
- Maria Messerschmidt, Increasing the valency of motion verbs
- Roland Pooth, Pre-causative detransitivization and the restriction of causatives to intransitives or to non-agentive intransitives
- Sergey Say, Natural antipassives
Towards a diachronic typology of individual person markers, convenors: Linda Konnerth and Andrea Sansò
Towards a diachronic typology of individual person markers, convenors: Linda Konnerth and Andrea Sansò
- Gilles Authier, Inclusiveness as an attractor: evidence from replacements and syncretisms in some East Caucasian pronominal sets
- Jonah Bates, Typology of Change in Person Marker Reference
- Sonia Cristofaro, Typological explanations in synchrony and diachrony: on some possible origins of 1st/2nd vs. 3rd person marking asymmetries
- Scott Delancey, Innovations in 2nd person indexation in Tibeto-Burman languages
- Yingqi Jing, Nico Neureiter, Peter Ranacher, Erik van Gijn, Erika Weinberger, Manuel Widmer and Alena Witzlack-Makarevich, On the evolution of so-called hierarchical person-marking systems in Tupian and Sino-Tibetan
- Linda Konnerth and Pavel Ozerov, The instability of the inclusive: Evidence from South-Central Trans-Himalayan languages
- František Kratochvíl, Diachronic development of individual person markers in the Alor-Pantar family
- Johanna Nichols, Evolutionary pathways for attractors in pronominal systems (poster)
- Marie-Caroline Pons, On the origin of 2nd person prefix #tV- in Trans-Himalayan languages
- Ilja Seržant, Evolutionary Typology of Bound Verbal Person-Number Indexes
- Natalia Stoynova, First person pronouns in the impersonal construction in Nanai and Ulch: from valency-changing to modals
Typologising the noun phrase: Beyond (non-)configurationality, convenors: Dana Louagie and Uta Reinöhl
Typologising the noun phrase: Beyond (non-)configurationality, convenors: Dana Louagie and Uta Reinöhl
- Antonio Magana Macias, Determiners in Tojolabal
- Eva Schultze-Berndt, When subjects frame the clause: Discontinuous noun phrases as an iconic strategy of marking sentence focus
- Mark Van de Velde, The AMAI cycle in the Bantu languages