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Japanese/Korean Linguistics, Vol. 19

Ho-min Sohn, Haruko Minegishi Cook, William O'Grady, Leon Serafim, Sany Yee Cheon

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgements

Part I Phonetics and Phonology

  • Integrated Accounts on Consonant Cluster Simplification
    Miyeon Ahn
  • A Statistical Model of Korean Loanword Phonology
    Hahn Koo
  • Variation and Noun-Verb Asymmetry in Consonant Cluster Simplification in Seoul Korean
    Kyuwon Moon
  • Japanese Velar Allophones Revisited: A Quantitative Analysis Based on the Speech Production Experiments
    Shin-Ichiro Sano

Part II Syntax

  • Decomposing Overt Syntax
    Yoshihisa Kitagawa
  • An Experimental Study of the Grammatical Status of caki in Korean
    Chung-Hye Han, Dennis Ryan Storoshenko, R. Calen Walshe
  • “AMOUNT” Relativization in Japanese
    Shun'Ichiro Inada
  • Is Genitive Subject Possible in Modern Korean?
    Yin-Ji Jin
  • Selective Reproduction in NP-Ellipsis
    Ock-Hwan Kim and Yodhihisa Kitagawa
  • NPI and Predicative Remnants in Japanese Sluicing
    Hiroko Kimura and Daiko Takahashi
  • Parametric Variation in Classification of Reflexives
    Maki Kishida
  • A Hybrid Approach to Floating Quantifiers: Experimental Evidence
    Heejeong Ko and Eunjeong Oh
  • The Nominative/Genitive Alternation in Modern Japanese: A Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) Evaluation Method-Based Analysis
    Hideki Maki, Yin-Ji Jin, Satoru Yokoyama, Michiyo Hamasaki, and Yukiko Ueda
  • On the Morphosyntactic Transparency of (S)ase and getP
    Takashi Nakajima
  • On Null Subjects in Embedded Jussive Clauses in Korean
    Jong Un Park
  • The Role of Merger and Typology of v Heads in Serialization
    Daeyoung Sohn and Heejeong Ko
  • Kuroda's (1978) Linear Case marking Hypothesis Revisited
    Ichiro Yuhara

Part III Semantics

  • Partitive Particle com in Korean
    Jaehee Bak
  • The Nature of Associative Plurality in Korean: Accounting for Ney and Tul
    Kyumin Kim and Sean Madigan
  • Processing, Pragmatics, and Scope in Korean and English
    Miseon Lee, Hye-Young Kwak, Sunyoung Lee, and William O'Grady

Part IV Pragmatics, Discourse and Sociolinguistics

  • Linguistic Forms, Context of Use and the Emergence of Functions: The Case of the Japanese Quotative Expression Tte
    Shigeko Okamoto
  • The Pragmatics of Pronoun Borrowing: The Case of Japanese Immigrants in Hawai'i
    Mie Hiramoto and Emi Morita
  • Ikema Ryukyuan: Investigating Past Experience and the Current State through Life Narratives
    Shoichi Iwasaki and Tsuyoshi Ono
  • Declination in Japanese Conversation: Turn Construction, Coherence and Projection
    Ross Krekoski
  • How to Tell a Story: Comparison of L1 Japanese/Korean and L2 Japanese Narratives
    Yuko Nakahama
  • Speech Style Shifts and Teacher Identities in Korean Language Classroom Discourse
    Miyung Park
  • The Manifestation of Intrasentential Code-Switching in Japanese Hip Hop
    Natsuko Tsujimura and Stuart Davis
  • The Polite Voice in Korean: Searching for Acoustic Correlates of contaymal and panmal
    Bodo Winter and Sven Grawunder

Part V Historical Linguistics and Grammaticalization

  • The Historical Development of the Korean Suffix -key
    Minju Kim
  • On the Origins of the Old Japanese kakari Particles, ka, , and kösö, and their Okinawan Counterparts: An Iconicity-based Hypothesis
    Leon A. Serafim and Rumiko Shnzato
  • Rendaku in Sino-Japanese: Reduplication and Coordination
    Timothy J. Vance

Part VI Psycholinguistics and L1/L2 Acquisition

  • Contrastive Focus Affects Word Order in Korean Sentence Production
    Heeyeon Y. Dennison and Amy J. Schafer
  • Does Noun Phrase Accessibility Matter? A Study of L2 Korean Relative Clause Production
    Sorin Huh
  • Negotiating Desirability: The Acquisition of the Uses of ii ‘good’ in Child-Mother Interactions in Japanese
    Chigusa Kurumada and Shoichi Iwasaki
  • A Trihedral Approach to the Overgeneration of “no” in the Acquisition of Japanese Noun Phrases
    Keiko Murasugi, Tomomi Nakatani, and Chisato Fuji

Index

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