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Reply | Forward Message #1754 of 1897 |
CLS 44 call for papers: Parasession on code-switching

Hi all,

The 44th Annual Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic
Society (CLS 44) will include a parasession on
code-switching. We are now accepting abstract
sumissions-- the deadline is January 11, 2008--
dealing with the linguistic, social and/or cognitive
dimensions of code-switching. The conference will be
taking place on April 24-26, 2008 and the plenary
speaker for the session will be Jeff MacSwan from
Arizona State University. You may view the call for
papers either on Linguist List or at the following
address:

http://humanities.uchicago.edu/orgs/cls/call.html

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to
write to me directly or to the CLS officers at
cls@....

Sincerely,

Juan Bueno
Graduate Student & CLS officer
University of Chicago



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Wed Nov 14, 2007 9:04 pm

jbholle
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Message #1754 of 1897 |
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Dear Friends I have collected some data which contains lot of code mixing. I would like to know the percentage of code mixing done by the speakers. How should...
kimi_raja
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Mar 3, 2007
2:58 am

Dear Kimi Raja, I would say that when you have an English word like "problem" with 'caariyaay' morphology (the genitive or oblique morpheme -att- added) the ...
Harold F. Schiffman
madrona2bus
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Mar 5, 2007
2:12 pm

i suggest to count these words as mixed: that is, you have in your data english words, tamil words and mixed words. for the mixed words you should see what is...
rina Raichlin
rina_raichlin
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Mar 6, 2007
8:47 pm

Hi kanthimathi! I came across your piece of subject matter on code mixing. it is interesting but very easy to analyze. Anyway, if you need any academical...
mohana dass
rmdassa
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Mar 6, 2007
8:48 pm

Hi, Kimi, This problem has cropped up on the list in different guises before, so check the archives. It is not a trivial one, but there are a number of clues,...
james fidelholtz
jfidelholtz
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Mar 6, 2007
8:48 pm

Hello, I think you could use MLF by Myers Scotton as a viable method for analyzying code mixing. We have used this format witha lot of Indian languages.This...
sapna bhat
sapna_bin
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Mar 6, 2007
8:49 pm

Jim, You say, ... What do you mean by 'aitchy' pronunciation? Closer to glottal [h], or to palatal [ç] (like German "Ich")? The latter is more fronted, but...
Celso Alvarez Cácc...
celsoacaccamo
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Mar 7, 2007
2:56 am

Celso, The German [x] after [a] is pronounced quite far back, though still in the velar region. What I was attempting to describe as the typical ...
james fidelholtz
jfidelholtz
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Mar 8, 2007
10:07 am

Jim, thanks for the explanation. It's just that I'm not familiar either with the native German [x] after [a] or with its English adaptation. For example, I...
Celso María Álv...
celsoacaccamo
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Mar 8, 2007
6:35 pm

Hi, Celso, Actually, English [h] is more complex (and even confusing for most linguists) than it appears at first blush. To make a long story short(er): ...
james fidelholtz
jfidelholtz
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Mar 10, 2007
9:15 am

I think this stream has gone in a very different direction from the question Celso originally asked, which was about the kind of [x] one would find in a...
Harold F. Schiffman
madrona2bus
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Mar 10, 2007
3:55 pm

Judging from your orthography, it looks like the Tamil stems are phonologically integrated. We classically distinguish between CS and borrowing on these...
Jeff MacSwan
macswan@...
Send Email
Mar 8, 2007
5:22 pm

Hi all, The 44th Annual Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society (CLS 44) will include a parasession on code-switching. We are now accepting abstract ...
Juan Jose Bueno Holle
jbholle
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Nov 15, 2007
2:57 am

Jim and Hal, Thank you both for your detailed explanations. Jim, what you tell about English /h/ and the aspiration of all voiceless consonants is very ...
Celso Alvarez Các...
celsoacaccamo
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Mar 10, 2007
9:04 pm

Celso: My impression of what English speakers do when they pronounce 'Bach' is something like [ba:h] with a little more constriction on the [h] than usual,...
Harold F. Schiffman
madrona2bus
Offline Send Email
Mar 10, 2007
10:07 pm
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