June 6, 2009 (Saturday)

The 21st North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics (NACCL-21)

June 6-8, 2009 Bryant University, Rhode Island

Conference Program

Bello Grand Hall: NACCL-21 On-Site Registration;

Coffee, breakfast, meals, banquet, book display.

June 6, 2009 (Saturday)

7:30 -9 am Breakfast and registration, Bello Grand Hall

9-9:45 am Welcome, Bello Grand Hall

9:45am-10:30 am Keynote speaker: Professor Hongyin Tao, UCLA, Bello Grand Hall

Core Vocabulary in Spoken Mandarin and the Integration of corpus-Based Findings into

Language Pedagogy

10:45 am-

Panel 1 Chair: Yang Xiao

12 noon

Bello 103

1. Development of Chinese Discourse Markers- Diachronic

Analysis and Cognitive Account, Yang Xiao, University of

California, Davis, xiao@ucdavis.edu

2. (Shu Tu Tong Gui) Do All Roads Lead to Rome?: Are

the Puzzling CAI and JIU Synonyms or Antonyms from the

Cognitive Perspective? Shuhui Su, Defense Language Institute,

shuhui@hawaii.edu

3. , , National

Hsinchu University of Education, cancertoleo@

Panel 2 Chair: Dongbo Zhang

Bello 102

1 Relation of Context Availability and Semantic Transparency to

Lexical Inference among Beginning-level Learners of Chinese as

a Foreign Language Dongbo Zhang, Carnegie Mellon University,

dongboz@andrew.cmu.edu

2 Roles of pictures and native language in lexical processing for

elementary American learners of Mandarin, Hsing-Ting A Wu,

Foreign Service Institute, Department of State, ting422@

3 L1 Influence on L2 Acquisition of Mandarin Resultative Verb

Compounds, Jen-I Li and Wei-Shan Li, National Taiwan Normal

University, lijeni@ntnu.edu.tw

Panel 3 Heritage

Room

Chair: Audrey Li & Shizhe Huang 1. Looking into clauses, Y.-H. Audrey Li, University of Southern California, audreyli@usc.edu; Shizhe Huang, Haverford College, shuang@haverford.edu 2. Uses of Mandarin verb-le: an Inner-Aspect Account, I-hao Woo, Boston University, ihwoo@bu.edu 3. Cantonese and Mandarin imperatives with aspect markers and pleonastic pronouns, Io-kei Joaquim Kuong, University of Macau, kuongik@umac.mo

Panel 4 Papitto

Chair: Chengzhi Chu

1. Re-examining the Typology of Motion Expressions in Chinese, Chengzi Chu, University of California, Davis, czchu@ucdavis.edu

2. , , , zhanghui27@

3. The Split-PP Hypothesis and PPs in Mandarin Chinese, ChengYu Edwin Tsai, National Tsing Hua University, cyetsai@

12-1:15 pm Bello Grand Hall

Lunch Keynote Speaker: Professor Zheng-Yu Zeng,

1:15 pm2:30 pm

Panel 5 Bello 103

Panel 6 Bello 102

Chair: Po-ting Chen 1. Topic and Topic-Comment Structures in First Language

Acquisition of Mandarin Chinese, Po-ting Chen, University of Texas at Austin, LAF #12, ptchen@mail.etexas.edu 2. ------- , Shanyao Zhang, zhangshanyao@

3. , Rong Li, ,

lirong1210@ Chair: Stephen Kraemer

1. An Introduction to the Phonological Basis of Chinese Characters in Modern Mandarin, Stephen Kraemer, University of Oregon, skraemer@uoregon.edu

2. , , , dexiang@sjtu.

3. Simplified and traditional scripts confer different advantages in reading, Hui-wen Cheng, Boston University, hwcheng@bu.edu

2:45 pm4:00 pm

Panel 7 Papitto

Panel 8 Bello 103

Chair: Guo-quan Jiang 1. , , , jiangmarshall@ 2. The Function of MEI in MEI-constructions, Huang Zanhui, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, ctzanhui@polyu.edu.hk 3. Mandarin Chinese passives: aspectual restrictions and competing constructions, Yuan-chen Jenny Yang, Yale University, yuan-chen.yang@yale.edu

Chair: I-Ping Wan 1. The phonological facilitation of semantic errors in Mandarin: Evidence from normal and agrammatic speech, I- Ping Wan, National Chengchi University, ipwan@nccu.edu.tw 2. sk- kr-, Qian-hui Li, National

Chengchi University, lch7350065@

Panel 9 Bello 102

Chair: Lyn Shan Tieu 1. Verb copying in Chinese: A syntax-PF account, Lyn Shan Tieu, University of Connecticut, lyn.tieu@ 2. Right Node Raising: Some Perspectives from Mandarin Chinese, Hsu-Te Johnny Cheng, University of Connecticut, hsute.cheng@uconn.edu 3. Analysis of Event Classifier ge in Post-verbal Construction in Mandarin Chinese, Chia-fen Wu, National Chiao Tung University, chiafenw@

Panel 10 Heritage

Room

Chair: Hui Cao 1. Discourse-oriented Distributivity in Mandarin Chinese, Hui Cao, University College London, hui.cao@ucl.ac.uk 2. Stance-taking with Wo jue-de -- A conversation analytic approach to spoken discourse, Ni Eng Lim, University of California, Los Angeles, limnieng@ 3. " NP""", , , teng2000123@.cn

Panel 11 Papitto

Chair: Fei Ren 1. Modality of Yinggai in Chinese, Fei Ren, University of Texas at Austin, renf@mail.etexas.edu 2. The Functions of Sentence-final Particle NE in Questions: a Corpus-based Approach, Lingxia Jin, University of Arizona, jinlingxia@ 3. A Discussion on Mandarin Aspectual Adverbs Yinjing, Buzai, Rangran, and Haimei, Chen Mao-Hsun, National Tsing Hua University, maohsun.chen@

4:15 pm5:00 pm

Bello Grand (1) 4:15-5:15 pm dinner Hall (2) Trip to Newport at 5:30 pm, $25.00 for bus fare at the participant's cost.

June 7, 2009, Sunday

7:30 am - Bello Grand Breakfast

8:30 am

Hall

8:30 am9:15 am

Keynote speaker: Loanword Adaptation and Phonological Theory,

Bello Grand

Professor Yenhwei Lin, Michigan State University

Hall

9:15 am ? 10:30 am

Panel 12 Bello 103

Panel 13 Bello 102

Panel 14 Heritage

Room

Panel 15 Papitto

Chair: Deng Lin 1. The Function of Jue as Revealed in the Bronze Inscriptions, Deng Lin, University of Washington, ldeng@u.washington.edu 2. Old Chinese F? as Negative and Contingency Marker,

Jonathan Smith, University of Pennsylvania, smithjm@sas.upenn.edu 3. , Peng Rui, National University of Singapore, ruipeng01@ Chair: Agnes He 1. Conversational Repair: Where modality and morality converge, Agnes He, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Agnes.He@sunysb.edu 2. Young Children's Syntactic Productivity: Evidence from Chinese SVO-ba Alteration, Dongbo Hsu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, dhsu2@illinois.edu Chair: Chao Li 1. Argument Realization: Particularities and Universals, Chao Li, College of Staten Island, CUNY, chao.li@aya.yale.edu 2. Even-Focus and VP-Fronting in Mandarin Chinese, I-Ta Chris Hsieh, University of Connecticut, i-ta.hsieh@uconn.edu 3. On verbal classifiers in Mandarin Chinese and elsewhere, MarieClaude Paris, University of Paris 7, mariclaude.paris@linguist.jussieu.fr Chair: San Duanmu 1. On the Interaction between Syntax and Phonology, San Duanmu, University of Michigan, duanmu@umich.edu 2. The Phonology of the Diminutive Suffix in Yanshi Chinese, Huili Zhang, University of Michigan, huiliz@umich.edu 3. Prosodic Influences on Chinese Tongue Twister Effects, Ting L. Huang, National Tsinghua University, d9644804@oz.nthu.edu.tw

10:45 am ? 12 pm

Panel 16 Bello 103

Panel 17 Bello 102

Panel 18 Heritage

Room

Chair: Chu Chia-ning 1. , Chu Chia-ning, , zjn@nccu.edu.tw 2. Grammatical changes reflected in the chapters "Yaodian" and "Gaoyao mo" in Shangshu and the relevant chapters in Shiji , Jung-Im Chang, University of Washington

at Seattle, jichang@u.washington.edu 3. Remnant OV structures in the Guodian Laozi, Jeffrey Rice,

University of Pennsylvania, jeffrric@sas.upenn.edu Chair: Chin-man Kuo

1. The meaning of S-topics in Chinese: a Crosslinguistic comparison, Chin-man Kuo, National Kaohsiung Normal University, t2617@nknucc.nknu.edu.tw

2. -- , , ,

denxiaoqin1234@.cn

3. ??, Hui Wang, National University of Singapore,

chswh@nus.edu.sg Chair: Zhijun Wang

1. Object NPs and the Meanings of the Chinese Aspect Marker le, Zhijun Wang, University of Massachusetts Amherst, zhijunw@asianlan.umass.edu

2. The Force Projection in Chinese Nominal Phrases, Yi-An Lin, Cambridge University, yal23@cam.ac.uk

3. Is there really a gap? Gapped and gapless relative clause processing in Mandarin, Yowyu (Brian) Lin and Susan Garnsey, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, yowyulin@cyrus.psych.uiuc.edu; sgarnsey@psych.illinois.edu,

12:00pm1:00 pm

Panel 19 Chair: Lingfei Wu

Papitto

1. ,, ,

llwu@ice.usp.ac.jp 2. , ,

, aifeixi@

3. "", , Bryant University,

Jijunyu@

(1) Lunch: Bello Grand Hall

(2) NACCL Steering Committee meeting: Bello 214

1:00pm2:15pm

Panel 20 Bello 102

Chair: Yu-Leng Lin 1. Tests of Analytic Bias in Native Mandarin and Native Southern Min Speakers, Yu-leng Lin, National Chung Cheng University, lin.yuleng@ 2. Partial-Reduplication with Fixed Segmentism in Chinese Dialects-- An Optimality Theory Approach, Chin-wei Wu,

................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download