Kate Davidson publishes paper with Rachel Mayberry in Language Acquisition
The paper examines the language performance of deaf adults who were not exposed to a sign language until later in life.
The paper examines the language performance of deaf adults who were not exposed to a sign language until later in life.
The article, titled “Reflexive -st verbs in Icelandic”, appears in the latest issue of Natural Language & Linguistic Theory.
The paper, titled “Learning General Phonological Rules From Distributional Information: A Computational Model,” appears in the journal Cognitive Science.
The paper is titled “‘Get’-passives and case alternations: The view from Icelandic.”
The paper is titled “Geography and spatial analysis in historical linguistics.”
The paper investigates the distinction between symmetric and asymmetric dative-nominative verbs in Icelandic by examining their behavior when embedded under láta ‘let/make’.
Claire Bowern co-edited the volume, and Steve Anderson and Ashwini Deo provided chapters on morphological and semantic/pragmatic change, respectively.
Edited by Raffaella Zanuttini and Larry Horn, the volume includes a chapter by Jim Wood and one by Raffaella Zanuttini and Judy Bernstein.
They perform statistical analyses of sound-meaning correspondences in 120 languages of Australia.
Their paper is titled “Eliminating rightward movement: Extraposition as flexible linearization of adjuncts.”