Measured Language volume includes chapter by Emily Gasser
Her chapter is titled “Subgrouping in Nusa Tenggara: The case of Bima-Sumba.”
Her chapter is titled “Subgrouping in Nusa Tenggara: The case of Bima-Sumba.”
Papers by Gaja Jarosz, Claire Bowern, and Emily Gasser are now available online in this new open access conference proceedings.
The chapter, coauthored with Einar Freyr Sigurðsson, is titled “Icelandic verbal agreement and pronoun-antecedent relations.”
The article challenges the view that rhythmic phonotactics in Huariapano (an extinct Panoan language of Peru) provides evidence for multiple layers of metrical parsing.
His paper is titled “Which judgments show weak exhaustivity? (And which don’t?).”
The essay argues that cognitive and computational approaches have a role to play in the study of culture.
The paper investigates the syntax of English verbal “rather,” noting its similarity to parasitic participle constructions found elsewhere in Germanic.
Kate, Diane Lillo-Martin, and Deborah Chen Pichler argue that the spoken English development of children with cochlear implants is not impaired by exposure to sign language.
Her paper, “Relatedness as a factor in language contact,” considers several aspects of language change and ways in which contact might interact with language relatedness.