Thursday, July 3
9:15 – 9:25 Registration
9:25 – 9:30 Opening remarks
9:30 – 10:20 Invited talk: Agent realization in deverbal nouns. Interactions between number, situation types, and sortal types
Barbara Schirakowski (Freie Universität Berlin)
10:20 -11:00 (Anti-)locality in nominalizations
Jens Hopperdietzel (University of Cologne)
11:00 – 11:20 Break
11:20 – 12:00 Childish hiding vs. child hiding – a rivalry of event noun patterns? Two experiments on German
Martina Werner (Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities, Austrian Academy of Sciences & University of Vienna)
Veronika Mattes (University of Graz)
Katharina Korecky-Kröll (Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities, Austrian Academy of Sciences & University of Vienna)
Nina Richter (University of Graz)
12:00 – 12:40 On the role of event nominalizations in reading comprehension: Insights from an eye-tracking study
Andrea Nardon, Ilaria Venagli, Serena Dal Maso, Sabrina Piccinin, Chiara Melloni, Maria Vender (University of Verona)
12:40 – 14:10 Lunch break
14:10 – 14:50 Temporal interpretations of nominalised clauses and the zero tense hypothesis
Marta Donazzan (LLING & Nantes Université)
Hamida Demirdache (LLING & Nantes Université)
Ana L. Müller (Universidade de São Paulo)
Hongyuan Sun (CERCLL & U. de Picardie)
14:50 – 15:10 Hidden complexity: Verbal structure in zero nominals in Santali [Online talk]
Biswanath Dash (Indian Institute of Technology Delhi)
15:10 – 15:30 Complex event nominals in Ardalani Kurdish [Online talk]
Alexander Hamo (University of Pennsylvania)
Saman Meihami (University of Arizona)
15:30 – 16:00 Break
16:00 – 16:40 Event, result, and beyond: A rule- and network-based approach to ambiguity in deverbal nominalization
Justine Salvadori (University of Fribourg, Switzerland)
16:40 – 17:30 Invited talk: What can distributional semantics tell us about nominalization?
Rossella Varvara (Università di Torino & Università di Pavia)
19:00 Workshop dinner
Friday, July 4
9:30 – 10:10 The “inner” syntax of nominalizations in Svan and Georgian
Martha McGinnis (University of Victoria)
Tamar Makharoblidze (Sokhumi State University & Ilia State University)
Ketevan Margiani (Ilia State University)
Léa Nash (CNRS & Université de Paris 8)
Jérémy Pasquereau (CNRS & Nantes Université)
10:10 – 10:50 Collectivization via nominalization in Polish
Bożena Rozwadowska, Natalia Shlikhutka, Marcin Wągiel (University of Wrocław, Poland)
10:50 – 11:30 Czech pseudo-deverbal nominals are deverbal
Guy Tabachnick, Petra Mišmaš (University of Nova Gorica)
11:30 – 13:30 Poster session with lunch
13:30 – 14:20 Invited talk: The typology of nominalizations and the NP/DP parameter: A cross-Slavic perspective
Predrag Kovačević (University of Novi Sad)
14:20 – 15:00 Something borrowed, something new, something strangely deverbal?: Latinate nominalisations in BCMS
Marko Simonović (University of Graz)
Boban Arsenijević (University of Graz)
Iva Dozet (University of Novi Sad)
15:00 – 15:20 Break
15:20 – 16:00 Ezafe in the context of PPs: What’s nominalization got to do with it?
Arsalan Kahnemuyipour (University of Toronto Mississauga)
Sahar Taghipour (University of California, Los Angeles)
Monica Irimia (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia)
16:00 – 16:40 On predicate inversion, nominal linkers, and phase heads in Japanese and Chinese
Yoshiki Ogawa, Yue Yupeng (Tohoku University)
16:40 – 17:00 Closing remarks
Poster session (Friday, July 4, 11:30 – 13:30)
(Alternate talk) Testing complex eventivity in zero nominals
Gianina Iordăchioaia (University of Graz), Jeannique Darby (University College Volda)
Supine causatives and mixed categories in Romanian
Elena Soare (Université Paris 8 & CNRS Structures Formelles du Langage)
On being vs becoming: Derived psych predicates and the failure to nominalize
Svitlana Antonyuk (University of Graz)
László Drienkó (SzSzC Jáky, Székesfehérvár, Hungary)
Simple event nouns and the nominalization squish
Diana Ștefan-Dinescu (University of Bucharest)
Nominalization, genitive, relativization and clause-chaining in Tibetan
Ralf Vollmann (University of Graz)
If your contribution was accepted as a poster, please note that posters should be in DIN A0 size, vertical orientation. The size of each poster wall is 170cm x 95cm (height x width).
A printable version of the program is downloadable HERE.