Japanese/Korean Linguistics 29
Table of Contents
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SECTION I: PLENARY PAPERS
- Taehong Cho (Hanyang Institute for Phonetics and Cognitive Sciences of Language, Hanyang University, Seoul)Linguistic Functions of Prosody and Its Phonetic Encoding with Special Reference to Koreanpages 1–24
- Bjarke Frellesvig (University of Oxford)On the Reconstruction of Pre-Old Japanese Morphology: OJ Grammatical Morphemes Reflecting Pre-OJ *k- ~*s-pages 25–49
- Peter Sells (University of York)Strong NPIs, the Scope of Negation, and the Components of Interpretation of Sika/Pakkey in Japanese and Koreanpages 51–68
SECTION II: ORAL PAPERS
II-1: Phonetics/Phonology/Morphology/Historical Linguistics
- Ji Yea Kim (Stony Brook University)Why [s]? An Analogical Account of the Epenthetic Consonant Quality in Non-standard Koreanpages 71–81
- Artemii Kuznetsov (Institute for Linguistic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, Kyoto University)Once Again on the Two -k(-)yer- in Old Japanese: Distribution, Semantics, Spellingpages 83–97
- Yuta Tatsumi (Meikai University)Structural Restrictions on Sequential Voicing in Japanese N-V Compoundspages 99–112
II-2: Syntax
- Yuya Noguchi (University of Connecticut)Where is a Monster?: A Case Study of Indexical Shift in Japanesepages 115–129
- Koji Shimamura (Kanazawa Gakuin University/Kobe City University of Foreign Studies)The Size of the Complement–The Properties of the Embedded -Yoo in Japanesepages 131–145
- Hideaki Yamashita (Yokohama City University)Multiple Argument Ellipsis in Japanese: A Case Study in Idiomatic Argument Ellipsispages 147–161
II-3: Formal Semantics/Pragmatics
- Seoyeon Jang and Ivano Caponigro (University of California San Diego)A Semantic Analysis for Korean Echo Questionspages 165–179
- Noritsugu Hayashi (The University of Tokyo, Komaba)Copula, Additive, and Wh-indeterminatespages 181–195
- Hitomi Hirayama (Kyushu Institute of Technology)Rising Declaratives in Japanesepages 197–208
- Koji Kawahara (Nagoya University of Foreign Studies)The Semantics of Iconic Gesture in Ideophonespages 209–223
II-4: Discourse/Functional Approaches
- Sujin Kang (University of Hawai'i at Mānoa)Question Design in a Korean Congressional Hearing: An Examniation of -cyo and -ci anh supnikkapages 227–241
- Kerry Sluchinski (University of Alberta, Modern Languages and Cultural Studies)Im/Politeness Variations in Digital Japanese-Korean Comfort Women Discoursespages 243–257
II-5: Psycholinguistics/Acquisition
- Hing Yuet Fung (The University of Hong Kong)A Postnominal Preference in Japanese Numeral Classifier Phrasespages 261–275
- So Young Lee (Miami University) and Jiwon Yun (Stony Brook University)NPI Licensing and Intrusion Effect in Koreanpages 277–289
- Mayuko Yusa and Bonnie D. Schwartz (University of Hawai'i at Mānoa)L2 Reconstruction Effects in Negated Disjunction under Pseudocleftspages 291–305
SECTION III: POSTER PAPERS
III-1: Phonetics/Phonology/Morphology/Historical Linguistics
- Michiko Fukasawa (University of Hawai'i at Mānoa)Argument Structure and Rendaku: An Experimental Studypages 309–317
- Shiori Ikawa (Rutgers University) and Akitaka Yamada (Osaka University)Territory Feature and a Distributed Morphology Approach to Clause Peripherypages 319–328
- Alexander Zapryagaev (NRU Higher School of Economics, Moscow)On the Names of Chinese Tones in Japanesepages 329–338
III-2: Syntax
- Yosuke Sato (Tsuda University)Reversed Polarity Sluicing in Japanesepages 341–350
- Yusuke Yagi (University of Connecticut), Yuta Sakamoto (Meiji University), and Yuta Tatsumi (Meikai University)Against Syntactic Neg-raising: Evidence From Polarity-Reversed Ellipsis in Japanesepages 351–359
III-3: Formal Semantics/Pragmatics
- Chen-An Chang (Konstanz University, Germany)The Use Conditional Meaning of Japanese Discourse Particle ittai in Questionspages 363–372
- Yuto Hirayama (Kansai Gaidai University)The Same Modality in Different Levels of Meaningpages 373–382
- Kenta Kakenami (Aoyama Gakuin University)A Disjunctive-Unconditional Analysis of Japanese Sukunakutomo 'at least'pages 383–392
- Kenta Mizutani (Aichi Prefectural University) and Shun Ihara (Kobe University)Two Strategies for Being 'at least': Japanese sukunakutomo and English at leastpages 393–402
- Natsuko Nakagawa (National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics) and Yuka Hayashi (Kobe University/National Museum of Ethnology)Contrastive topic =gyaa in Ikema Nishihara Miyakoan of Southern Ryukyuspages 403–412
III-4: Discourse/Functional Approaches
- Kangwon Lee and Kaoru Horie (Nagoya University)Differential Manifestations of Personal (Pro-)noun Omission in Japanese and Korean: A Functional-Pragmatic Accountpages 415–424
- Jiyeon Park (Jilin International Studies University)The Use of Korean Ideophones in Newspaper Headlinespages 425–434
III-5: Psycholinguistics/Acquisition
- Shinnosuke Isono and Yuki Hirose (University of Tokyo)Psycholinguistic Evidence for Severing Arguments from the Verbpages 437–446
- Ayumi Nobuki and Utako Minai (University of Kansas)The Role of the Contrastive Topic -wa in the Felicity Judgment of Negation in Japanesepages 447–456
- Hiroyuki Shimada (Hokuriku University), Riho Mochizuki (Ochanomizu University), and Kyoko Yamakoshi (Ochanomizu University)Children's Incorrect Association of the Focus Particle 'Dake' in Japanese Cleftspages 457–466
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