基本説明
This selection of papers reflects the Eighth Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference's division into five subareas: Conversation and Discourse Analysis; Language Processing; Morphology, Semantics and Grammatical Function; Phonetics, Phonology and Historical Linguistics; and more.
Full Description
Japanese and Korean are typologically quite similar, so a linguistic phenomenon in one language often has a counterpart in the other. The papers in this volume are intended to further compare and/or contrast research in both languages. This selection of papers reflects the Eighth Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference's division into five subareas: Conversation and Discourse Analysis; Language Processing; Morphology, Semantics and Grammatical Function; Phonetics, Phonology and Historical Linguistics; and Generative Syntax. The Eighth Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference was held at Cornell University.
Contents
Preface David James Silva; Part I. Conversation and Discourse Analysis: 1. Repetition, reformulation, and definitions: prosodic indexes of elaboration in Japanese discourse Mieko Banno; 2. Projection of talk using language, intonation, deictic and iconic gestures and other body movements Keiko Emmett; 3. Turn-taking in Japanese political debate: syntax, intonation, and semantics Hiroku Furo; 4. Interactive grammar: the turn-final use of Nuntey in Korean and Kedo in Japanese Yong-Yae Park; 5. Specificity and saleability: product highlighting strategies in television commercials of Japan, Korea, and the US Susan Strauss; 6. Direct discourse and new character introductions in Japanese narrative discourse Noriko Watanabe; Part II. Language Processing: 7. Adjectives and adjectival nouns in Japanese: psychological processes in sentence production Noriko Iwasaki; 8. The psychological status of syntactic constraints on Rendaku Tam Kozman; 9. Head directionality and intrasentential codeswitching: a study of Japanese Canadian and Korean Americans' bilingual speech Miwa Nishimura and Keumsil Kim Yoon; 10. Psycholinguistic investigation of the acquisition of negation in Japanese Tetsuya Sano; Part III. Morphology, Semantics and Grammatical Function; 11. Functional duality of case-marking particles in Japanese and its implications for grammaticalization: a contrastive study with Korean Kaoru Horie; 12. Grammaticalization: the ambiguity of the Japanese morpheme -e- Tomiko Kodama; 13. A unified analysis of Japanese adjectives Kunio Nishiyama; 14. Feature checking and morphological merger Hiromu Sakai; 15. Kakari Musubi revisited: its functions and development Rumiko Shizato; 16. Grammaticalization, aspect, and emotion: the case of Japanese -te shimau and Korean -a/e pelita Susan Strauss and Sung-Ock Sohn; 17. The function of -o in Japanese Naoko Takahashi; 18. The stage-level/individual-level distinction: an analysis of -te-iru; Ayako Yamagata Part IV. Phonetics, Phonology and Historical Linguistics: 19. Intergestural overlap and timing in Korean Palatalization: an optimality-theoretic approach Taehong Cho; 20. Sound symbolism and sound change: weakening of labials Shoko Hamano; 21. Anti-trapping effects in an Iambic system: vowel shortening in Korean Jong-Kyoo Kim; 22. The interaction of pitch accent and vowel devoicing in Tokyo Japanese Mafuyu Kitahara; 23. The prosodic analysis of intervocalic consonant lengthening in Korean Mira Oh; 24. Minimality constraints and the prosodic structure of child Japanese Mitushiko Ota; 25. Sonorant assimilation within correspondence theory Oh-Sook Park; 26. A reconstruction of proto-Ryukyuan accent Moriyo Shimabukuro; 27. Vowel deletion in Japanese Yuki Takatori; 28. The Old Japanese vowel system: implications of speech perception Natasha Warner; Part V. Generative Syntax: 29. Why, contrastive topic, and LF movement Eun Cho; 30. On seloDaeho Chung and Hong-Keun Park; 31. Scrambling of weak NPs in Japanese Yasuo Ishii; 31. VP complement of a hi-causative Ae-Ryung Kim; 32. Focusing effects in Korean/Japanese ellipsis Jeong-Seok Kim and Keun-Won Sohn; 33. A lexical mapping theory account of Korean case alternations Steven G. Lapointe; 34. Scrambling of Wh-phrases and the move-F hypothesis Hideki Maki and Masao Ochi; 35. Structure within VP in Japanese Kazuko Yatsushiro; 36. Ambiguity of relational nouns and the argument structure of nouns Jeong-Me Yoon; 27. The strong [neg] feature of Neg and NPI licensing in Japanese Yasushi Yoshimoto.