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Ling Lunch Series

The SFU Ling Lunch Series is an informal venue for students and faculty to present work in progress, discuss recent work, or give practice talks for conference presentations. It's a brown-bag lunch, and it takes places Tuesdays at 12:30.

Check out the Linguistics Colloquium Series schedule as well.

Protocol: the Ling Lunch series is self-organizing, meaning that the presenter, or the presenter's advisor or local sponsor, is responsible for the logistical details, including introducing the speaker if necessary, finding a room, and harmonizing the event with the department schedule. When these details are set, the presenter/sponsor may hand off the advertising of the event by sending an email with all the relevant information to the colloquium organizers (Panayiotis Pappas, panayiotis_pappas@sfu.ca). They will then send out two emails (one week before, one day before) and put the event on the Ling Lunch series webpage and department schedule. Time slots are on a first come first serve basis, so presenters need to check the Ling Lunch series page and the department schedule for already scheduled events.

Schedule Fall 2009

Sep 23

Dieter Stein (University of Dusseldorf)
Title: The linguistics of literalness

  12:30 pm, Halpern 114
       
Oct 20 William Salmon (University of British Columbia)
Title: Epistemic must, evidential signals, and dimensions of meaning
  12:30 pm, Halpern 114

Schedule Spring 2009

Jan 27

Shelley Tulloch (St. Mary's University)
Title: Inuit: Leaders in Language Preservation
(Abstract)

  Haplern 114
       
Feb 24 Julien Eychenne (Simon Fraser University)
Title: Liaison in French: some non-standard facts (and a non-standard analysis!)
(Abstract)
  Halpern 114
       
Mar 24 Frederick J. Newmeyer (Simon Fraser University)
Title: What can we learn from conversational corpora about the nature of grammar?
(Abstract)
  EDB 8651
       

Schedule Fall 2008

Oct 21 Greg Coppola (SFU)
Title: Deriving locality effects by modeling the parser
(Abstract)
  Mac Lab (RCB 7201)
       

 

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