Conference proceedings
Lemon, Tyler. To appear. The allomorphy of Uab Meto subject-agreement prefixes: Structural adjacency, not linear. In Proceedings of the 31st meeting of the Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association (AFLA 31). [pre-print pdf , revised pre-print pdf]
Lemon, Tyler. 2024. Low nominative agreement in Uab Meto. In Robert Autry, Gabriela de la Cruz, Luis A. Irizarry Figueroa, Kristina Mihajlovic, Tianyi Ni, Ryan Smith & Heidi Harley (eds.), Proceedings of the 39th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics (WCCFL 39), vol. 2. 600-608. Sommerville, MA: Cascadilla Proceedings Project. [pre-print pdf , revised pre-print pdf , link to published version]
Lemon, Tyler. 2020. Vietnamese subcomparatives, the grammar of degrees, and comparative deletion. In Michael Franke, Nikola Kompa, Mingya Liu, Jutta L. Mueller & Juliane Schwab (eds.), Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 24 (SuB 24), vol. 1. 497-514. Osnabrück: Osnabrück University. [link , pdf]
Lemon, Tyler. 2017. The distribution and variation of non-coordinated pronoun case forms in English. In Patrick Farrell (ed.), Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 2, 7. 1-15. [link , pdf]
Selected manuscripts
Lemon, Tyler. Submitted. Syntactic variation in nominative alignment: Low nominative agreement in Uab Meto. Ms. University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, California. [version 1 pdf , version 2 pdf , version 3 pdf]
Lemon, Tyler. 2024. The morphosyntax of verbal agreement in Uab Meto. University of California, Berkeley dissertation. [link]
Lemon, Tyler. 2023. A theoretical account of allomorphy in the Uab Meto verbal complex, with a focus on subject-agreement prefixes. Ms. University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, California. [pdf]
Lemon, Tyler. 2020. Variable repairs for word-initial consonant clusters in Uab Meto. Ms. University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, California. [pdf]
Lemon, Tyler. 2019. Noun classifiers in Todos Santos Mam. Ms. University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, California. [pdf]
Lemon, Tyler. 2017. An examination of the distribution and variation of non-coordinated pronoun case forms in English. Undergraduate thesis. Stanford University. Stanford, California. [pdf]