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Japanese/Korean Linguistics 30

Table of Contents

Download all of the following pdf files as one big document.


    SECTION I: PLENARY PAPERS

  • Shin Fukuda (University of Hawai'i at Mānoa), Hajime Ono (Tsuda University), Nozomi Tanaka (Indiana University), Jon Sprouse (New York University Abu Dhabi)Re-examining Island Effects with NP-scrambling in Japanese: The Effect of Individual Variationpages 3–27
  • Suwon Yoon (University of Seoul)Emotive Terms in Korean: from Semantics to Big Data-based Analysispages 29–43
  • Jiwon Yun (Stony Brook University)Wh-intonation in Koreanpages 45–60

    SECTION II: ORAL PAPERS

    II-1: Phonetics, Phonology, and Morphology

  • Chuyu Huang (Nagoya Gakuin University) Foot-Level and Boundary-Durational Effect Driven by Morphological Complexity in Japanesepages 63–75
  • Yu Tanaka (Doshisha University)Vowel Coalescence in Colloquial Japanese: Phonological and Non-phonological Factorspages 77–91

    II-2: Syntax, Semantics, and Pragmatics

  • Yuto Hirayama (Kansai Gaidai University)Predicates of Personal Taste with Epistemic Modals/Evidentials in Japanesepages 95–109
  • Yuto Hirayama (Kansai Gaidai University), Kenta Mizutani (Aichi Prefectural University)On the Interpretation of Verb-Modifying Measure Phrases in Japanesepages 111–125
  • Min-Joo Kim (Texas Tech University), EunHee Lee (University at Buffalo) Bare vs. Demonstrative Anaphoric Definites in Korean and Their Cross-linguistic Implicationspages 127–141
  • Kenta Mizutani (Aichi Prefectural University)On the Polarity Sensitivity Induced by the Contrastive Topic Marker wa in Japanesepages 143–157
  • Yuya Noguchi (University of Connecticut)On the Directive Interpretation of Non-Past Sentences in Japanesepages 159–173
  • Eri Tanaka (Osaka University), Masako Maeda (Kyushu University), Yoichi Miyamoto (Osaka University)On Negative Island Effects and Exhaustification with Adjunct Nani-o in Japanesepages 175–188
  • Nozomi Tanaka (Indiana University)Reexamining Island Effects in Japanese Complex NPs with Argument Wh-in-situpages 189–203
  • Linmin Zhang (NYU Shanghai)Focus Intervention Effects Revisited: A Semantics-Pragmatics Approachpages 205–219

    II-3: Corpus/Usage-based Linguistics and Discourse Analysis

  • Carey Benom (Kyushu University), Young-Min Oh (Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University)"Keepwords", the Limits of Creativity, and the Notion of the Core of an Idiompages 223–237
  • EunHee Lee (University at Buffalo)Crosslinguistic and Crosscultural Similarities and Differences in Rhetorical Structure of Narratives: A Comparative Study of English and Korean Oral Narrativespages 239–253
  • Kerry Sluchinski (University of Alberta, East Asian Studies)Shifting Semantics of Grandmother in Digital Japanese-Korean Comfort Women Discoursespages 255–270
  • Sue Y. Yoon (Univeristy of Hawai'i at Mānoa)A Comprehensive Analysis of Response Tokens in Korean: Resources for Managing Turns, Sequences, and Stances in Talk-in-Interactionpages 271–285

    II-4: Historical Linguistics and Grammaticalization

  • Qiūshí Chén (University of Connecticut)Deriving Mizenkei in Old Japanese Verbal Morphologypages 289–303
  • Eunhye Kim Hess (Oklahoma State University)Diachronic Change of -key and -tolok to DO-Causatives: A Usage-based Construction Grammar Approachpages 305–318
  • Reijirou Shibasaki (Meiji University and University of British Columbia)Some Issues on Contact-Induced Grammaticalization: The Case of ya-ina-ya in Modern through Present Day Japanesepages 319–333
  • Akitaka Yamada (Osaka University)A Historical and Morphosyntactic Analysis of Japanese Epistemic Markers (Dearoo/Daroo and -Oo)pages 335–349

    SECTION III: POSTER PAPERS

    III-1: Phonetics, Phonology, and Morphology

  • Takayuki Akimoto (Kogakuin University)On the Domains of Japanese Verbal Compounds: Su-insertion, Sequential Voicing and Compound Ellipsispages 353–362
  • Maude Bouvier (Université du Québec à Montréal)Double Allomorphy in Korean Nominative Pronouns? Evidence from Demonstrative and Interrogative Proforms for a Floating Segment Analysis and Derivation by Phasepages 363–373
  • Morine Kondo (The University of Tokyo), Takane Ito (The University of Tokyo), Yohei Oseki (The University of Tokyo)Morphological Structures of Japanese Adjectival Compoundspages 375–385
  • Sanae Matsui (Sophia University), Ai Mizoguchi (Maebashi Institute of Technology, NINJAL), Ayako Hashimoto (Tokyo Kasei-gakuin College), Chuyu Huang (Nagoya Gakuin University), Naoya Watabe (The University of Tokyo), Hiroto Noguchi (Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Mafuyu Kitahara (Sophia University)An Interaction of Mutually Bleeding Processes: Voicing of Intervocalic Plosives and Vowel Devoicing in Tohoku Japanesepages 287–395

    III-2: Syntax, Semantics, and Pragmatics

  • Brian Agbayani (California State University, Fresno), Toru Ishii (Meiji University)Syntactic and Prosodic Topicalization in Japanesepages 399–409
  • Sandiway Fong (University of Arizona), Jason Ginsburg (Osaka Kyoiku University), Masumi Matsumoto (Osaka Kyoiku University), Hiroshi Terada (Osaka Kyoiku University)The Strong Minimalist Thesis (SMT): Form Copy (FC) and the Serial Verb Construction (SVC)pages 411–421
  • Norimasa Hayashi (Nanzan University)M-Gap Analysis of the Highest Clause Sensitivity in Japanese Relative Clausespages 423–432
  • Takashi Ikeda (Aichi Prefectural University)What Triggers Movement of the Head Nominal in the Relative Clause?pages 433–439
  • Mitsuko Narita Izutsu (Fuji Women's University), Yong-Taek Kim (Georgia Institute of Technology), Katsunobu Izutsu (Hokkaido University of Education)"Naked" or "Dressed Up"? A Contrastive Analysis of Response Cries Between Korean and Japanesepages 441–451
  • Young-Hoon Kim (Cornell University)Argument Ellipsis via C-Probing in Japanese and Koreanpages 453–462
  • Ryoichiro Kobayashi (Tokyo University of Agriculture)Verbs Stay In-situ in Japanese: A Case Study of VP-frontingpages 463–470
  • Masako Maeda (Kyushu University), Yoichi Miyamoto (Osaka University)Scope Properties of Parasitic Gaps in Adjunct Control in Japanesepages 471–481
  • Asako Matsuda (Wayo Women's University)What Japanese -(Y)oo and -Tai Suffixes Tell Us about De Sepages 483–492
  • Kaori Miura (Kyushu Sangyo University)On the Syntax of the Adjective-based Adverbspages 493–501
  • Yosho Miyata (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)NCI XP-shika as Adjunct, NOT Argument in Japanese and its D-Linking Propertypages 503–512
  • Nozomi Moritake (Kyushu University / JSPS Research Fellow)Nominative Case Assignment in Apparently Tenseless Clauses in Japanesepages 513–523
  • Toshiko Oda (Tokyo Keizai University), Alexander Wimmer (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin)Japanese If-Adversativespages 525–535
  • David Y. Oshima (Nagoya University)The Japanese Verb Itasu and its Kin: Dishonorifics (Kenjōgo II) vs. Courtesy Honorifics (Teichōgo)pages 537–546
  • Koji Shimamura (Kanazawa Gakuin University/Kobe City University of Foreign Studies), Takayuki Akimoto (Kogakuin University)Accusative Case without Agreepages 547–556
  • Frank Sode (Humboldt University of Berlin), Ayaka Sugawara (Waseda University)Nouniness, Factive and Implicative Readings: Japanese Wasure- ('Forget')pages 557–566
  • Kensuke Takita (Doshisha University)Flexible Theta-Marking and (Anti-)Labelingpages 567–576
  • Yusuke Yagi (University of Connecticut), Yuta Tatsumi (Meikai University)Crossover Effects with Set Indices: Evidence from Japanese Scramblingpages 577–586
  • Hideaki Yamashita (Yokohama City University)On the Absence of Minimality Effect with Japanese Cleftpages 587–595
  • Heesun Yeom (Seoul National University)Korean Locative Alternation Revisited: Decomposing Event Structurespages 597–606
  • Florence Yukun Zhang (New York University)On the Left Branch Extraction of Adjectives in East Asian Languagespages 607–615

    III-3: Experimental Linguistics and Acquisition

  • Youngin Lee (University of Hawai'i at Mānoa)The Role of Complementizers in Korean Subject and Object Control Constructionspages 619–629
  • Amaya Madden (University of Kansas), Utako Minai (University of Kansas)Acquisition of Japanese Negative Polarity Item Licensing by English-speaking Second Language Learnerspages 631–640
  • Kyoko Yamakoshi (Ochanomizu University), Hiroyuki Shimada (Hokuriku University), Mutsumi Daicho (Ochanomizu University)Children's Acquisition of Exhaustivity in Clefts and Right Dislocations in Japanesepages 641–648
  • Kyoko Yamakoshi (Ochanomizu University), Hiroyuki Shimada (Hokuriku University), Mutsumi Daicho (Ochanomizu University)Children's Acquisition of Exhaustivity in Clefts and Right Dislocations in Japanesepages 641–648

    III-4: Discourse Analysis, Historical Linguistics, and Grammaticalization

  • John Bundschuh (Swarthmore College)-aku Nominalization in Early-Heian Japanese Kundoku Discourse: A Preliminary Studypages 651–661
  • HwanHee Kim (Harvard University)Dynamic Identity Shifts through Code-switching Strategies in Multilayered Online Interactions of Koreanpages 663–672
  • Yong-Taek Kim (Georgia Institute of Technology)Inverse Construction as a Solution to the Mismatch Between Perception and Cognitionpages 673–682
  • Mitsuko Takahashi (Nagaoka University of Technology)Historical Changes of the Japanese Adverb Kamahetepages 683–692


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