Hyunjung Joo & Prof. Jardine Present at SCiL
From August 18 to 20, graduate student Hyunjung Joo and Professor Adam Jardine presented their work at the Society for Computation in Linguistics (SCiL 2025), held at the University of … Read More
From August 18 to 20, graduate student Hyunjung Joo and Professor Adam Jardine presented their work at the Society for Computation in Linguistics (SCiL 2025), held at the University of … Read More
This academic year, we’re excited to announce that a new faculty member is joining our group of semanticists! Below is an introduction that Professor Ryan Smith has shared with us. … Read More
Last week on March 7th, Dorothy Ahn gave an invited talk titled “Encoding deixis in spoken and signed languages” at the UConn Linguistics Colloquium Series.
Earlier this month, Professor Mark Baker gave his first poster presentation at the LSA Annual Meeting! The title of his poster presentation was “Deriving obligatory control from thematic uniqueness”. More … Read More
Professor Troy Messick and current graduate student Sreekar Raghotham recently published a paper titled “On Case-copying reflexives” in Natural Language & Linguistic Theory. The abstract from the paper is copied … Read More
We are pleased to announce that Kristen will join the LSA Executive Committee at the conclusion of the 2025 Annual LSA Meeting! The election for LSA Officers & Executive Committee … Read More
Current faculty member Kristen Syrett and Rutgers alum Megan Gotowski presented posters at the Boston University Conference on Language Development (BUCLD) this November. Kristen Syrett presented two poster presentations at … Read More
On October 25th, Dorothy Ahn gave an invited colloquium talk at the University of Maryland. The title of the talk was “Building Blocks of Reference.” Abstract: Reference in language generally … Read More
Maria Kouneli’s collaboration with Imke Driemel has recently been published in the Natural Language & Linguistic Theory (NLLT) journal. Their paper “C-Agree is local subject-verb agreement in Kipsigis” was accepted … Read More
On October 25th, Professor Kristen Syrett gave an invited colloquium talk at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her talk was titled “Categorizing and quantifying parts of objects: … Read More