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Tue, 09/23/2025 - 11:05
We are happy to announce a new workshop dedicated to the interplay between language and food in Asia. This workshop invites any research exploring the role of language in shaping our culinary and cultural experiences and how the food culture permeates linguistic practices. The workshop topics include but are not limited to: - Food and sensory lexicon - Food wanderwort, - Food and Metaphor - Food and Neologism - Emotion analysis of food narratives - Menu Language - Recipe Languag

Tue, 09/23/2025 - 10:05
Invited speaker: Pavel Iosad (University of Edinburgh) Morphological alternations can be realized through the concatenation of affixes, or through non-concatenative processes that do not involve the addition of segmental material, such as modifications of suprasegmental features (e.g. length or tone), or the featural constituents of segments (e.g. vowel height, consonantal manner of articulation). The two nouns below, from Nuer (a West Nilotic language of South Sudan and Ethiopia), illustrate

Tue, 09/23/2025 - 10:05
Linguistics at school in a European perspective (LiDi 2026) University of Zurich April 13-14, 2026 Confirmed speakers: Ann-Marie Moser (University of Zurich) Anna Pineda (University of Barcelona) Tom Rankin (Masaryk University Brno) Michelle Sheehan (Newcastle University) Jimmy van Rijt (Utrecht University) Organizers: Angelika Golegos & Andreas Trotzke Europe鈥檚 linguistic landscape is increasingly diverse. It encompasses standardized national languages (taught to both L1 and

Tue, 09/23/2025 - 09:05
The rapid expansion of language policy and planning over the course of the last decades has led to a breadth of concepts, phenomena, and processes vying for attention in the field. Attempts at integrating and balancing all of these priorities have led some researchers to ask, 鈥渨hat isn鈥檛 language policy?鈥 (Johnson, 2012, p. 9). While the work of early scholars was 鈥渢echnical, oriented toward problem-solving, and pragmatic in its goals鈥 (Ricento, 2000, p. 198), this was critiqued by later scholar

Tue, 09/23/2025 - 09:05
This conference, hosted by CRC 1412 鈥淩egister鈥 (https://sfb1412.hu-berlin.de/projects/b03), explores the role of asymmetric communication in ancient societies, focusing on how power imbalances, status differences, and socio-cultural hierarchies shaped modes of interaction. Attendance is in person only. Please register by October 10, 2025, via asymcom-conference@hu-berlin.de. https://www.archaeologie.hu-berlin.de/de/aknoa/veranstaltungen/konferenzen/asymmetric-communication-in-ancient-societi

Mon, 09/22/2025 - 12:05
Organisers: Iris Kamil, Letizia Cerqueglini Call deadline: 1 November 2025 It is by now well-established that the domains of human language rarely exist on their own: syntax, semantics, morphology, phonology, and pragmatics regularly interact with one another on what is known as the interfaces of grammar. The study of the various interfaces is vast, and several frameworks of theoretical linguistic research seek to formalize them, for instance Distributed Morphology, Halle & Marantz 199; Para

Mon, 09/22/2025 - 09:05
The third edition of MMSYM continues the symposium series on multimodal communication previously held in Frankfurt am Main (2024) and Barcelona (2023). The symposium aims at gaining insights into the interaction and/or co-dependence of semiotic resources in spoken and signed language. To advance our understanding of communication, the symposium aims at further integrating multimodality as an integral part of linguistics and cognitive science. This overarching goal of the symposium is rooted in t

Fri, 09/19/2025 - 08:05
The University of British Columbia is pleased to host a joint conference bringing together SULA (Semantics of Under-represented Languages in the Americas) and TripleA (Semantics of Languages of Africa, Asia, Australia and Oceania) on May 12 -15, 2026. This will be the first time that these conferences will be combined into one joint event. The conference also marks the 25th Anniversary of SULA, which took place for the first time in 2001. The goal of the conference is to bring together resear

Fri, 09/19/2025 - 07:05
Workshop: Artificial Languages in the Linguist鈥檚 Toolbox We are delighted to invite you to attend the second workshop of the EXREAN project* at the Freie Universit盲t Berlin which will explore the application of artificial languages as a tool in linguistic research. Artificial language learning experiments test how far language users can extract rule-like generalizations from structured input (Culbertson, 2023). Since Reber鈥檚 (1967) seminal artificial grammar (AG) study, which aimed at inve

Fri, 09/19/2025 - 07:05
Abstracts (max. 300 words, excluding references) should be sent to Natalia Levshina (natalia.levshina@ru.nl) and Nicole Katzir (nicole.katzir@gmail.com) by November 10th. Large Language Models (LLMs) are models with billions of parameters, trained on vast amounts of text data to learn statistical patterns in language, and able to generate, process, and predict human(-like) text. As discussions at the recent SLE meeting and other venues demonstrate, the rise of LLMs has major consequences for

Fri, 09/19/2025 - 06:05
The American Association for Corpus Linguistics (AACL) conference will take place 18-19 April 2026 at the University of Florida. The extended deadline for abstract submissions for oral presentations, posters, or workshops is 30 September 2025. Our plenary speakers are Paul Baker (Lancaster University, UK), Kristopher Kyle (University of Oregon), Kenji Sagae (UC Davis), and Sali Tagliamonte (University of Toronto). More information, including a link for abstract submission, is here: h

Fri, 09/19/2025 - 05:05
Convenors: Abdelkader Fassi Fehri (Mohammed V University & Linguistic Society of Morocco) Peter Hallman (Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence) Key words: Arabic/Semitic lexicon, root/template morphosyntax, allosemy, acquisition Meeting Description: In light of the enthusiastic and successful reception of the first SLE Workshop on the Arabic (Semitic) Lexicon, held at the 57th SLE Meeting at Helsinki, 2024, and sustained interest in developing descriptive, typologi

Fri, 09/19/2025 - 05:05
We are pleased to announce the upcoming 14th edition of our conference Language of the Third Millennium, to be held on 18-20 March 2026.The conference aims to create a forum dedicated to the exploration of the interplay of modes鈥攍inguistic, visual, gestural, spatial, aural, and beyond鈥攊n meaning-making processes across a wide range of communicative contexts The importance of multimodality becomes evident in everyday life, strongly tied to dynamic media contexts and influenced by the online en

Fri, 09/19/2025 - 05:05
Interactional Competences and Practices in a Second Language (ICOP-L2) conferences bring together researchers sharing a socially and interactionally situated view of language use, L2 learning and L2 interactional competence development. We hereby invite researchers at all career levels who draw on the principles of ethnomethodology, (multimodal) conversation analysis, membership categorization analysis, usage-based linguistics and related approaches to present their research on how L2/multilingu

Thu, 09/18/2025 - 07:05
According to Natural Morphology (e.g., Dressler 2005), the most natural morphological constructions are those based on constructional iconicity, i.e.,constructions in which more meaning is represented by more form. From this point of view, concatenative morphology is natural and typical, while non-concatenative morphology can be perceived as atypical, deviating from the standard types of word-formation in the languages of the world (see also 艩tekauer, Valera, and K枚rtv茅lyessy 2012). The types of

Thu, 09/18/2025 - 06:05
The conference is an open forum for scholars interested in exploring empirically topics and issues in Arabic applied linguistics. The topics of the conference cover three main strands: I. Topics which deal with Arabic second language acquisition (SLA). Current approaches for investigating the different aspects (phonology, vocabulary, morphology, syntax, morphosyntax, semantics, pragmatics, etc.) of Arabic SLA include but not limited to: - Formal (generative, functional, typological) - Cog

Thu, 09/18/2025 - 06:05
We are delighted to announce that we are now receiving submissions for our symposium entitled 鈥淧ushing the boundaries of linguistic categorisation鈥. This symposium is organised by both the CELISO, Sorbonne University and the CREA, Paris Nanterre University. It will take place on Friday the 10th of April 2026 starting at 9 AM at the Maison de la Recherche, Sorbonne University, 28 rue Serpente, 75006 Paris (room D323). The importance of categorisation as a cognitive operation cannot be overstat

Thu, 09/18/2025 - 06:05
[German underneath] The Association of Emerging Linguists invites young and/or student linguists to participate in the Emerging Linguists Workshop at the 49th Austrian Linguistics Conference. This year, the Emerging Linguists Workshop is being organised as part of a course at the Alpen-Adria-Universit盲t Klagenfurt (but attendance at the course is not a prerequisite for participation in the workshop!). The Association of Emerging Linguists (EL) consists of students, graduates and those int

Thu, 09/18/2025 - 05:05
Keynote Speaker: Dr. Luke Fleming (University of Montreal) The Symposium About Language and Society, Austin (SALSA) is an annual conference that brings together scholars from around the world who study the social life of language. We are now accepting submissions for SALSA XXX, which will take place January 16-17, 2026. The deadline for submissions is October 6, 2025. One panel at this year鈥檚 conference will be devoted to the theme 鈥淭aboo and Transgression.鈥 For the other panels, we welcome

Thu, 09/18/2025 - 05:05
Convenors: Vladimir Panov, Vilnius University (vladimir.panov@flf.vu.lt); Maria Khachaturyan, CNRS/University of Helsinki (maria.khachaturyan@helsinki.fi); Pavel Ozerov, University of Innsbruck (pavel.ozerov@uibk.ac.at) Workshop Description: The goal of this workshop is to lay the groundwork for an utterance/TCU-oriented typology. Departing from the traditional clause-based model of cross-linguistic variation, we aim to uncover the fundamental syntactic patterns of spoken discourse and the t

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