Workshop on Suspended Affixation
October 26-27, 2012
Department of Linguistics, Cornell University; the National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics; and Linguistics, Syracuse University
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The topic of so-called Suspended Affixation (SA) is an important and topical one, because the facts that fall under this term are located in the interface of morphology and syntax. This term refers to a phenomenon, found in many languages, but in particular in syntactically head-final and morphologically agglutinative languages, whereby in a coordination of words, some right-peripheral inflectional morphology shows up on the second conjunct only, but has scope over the first conjunct, as well; thus, that morphology is, in some sense, "suspended." This phenomenon of suspended affixation (SA) is illustrated by the Turkish examples below, where suspending the plural morpheme in (1) and copular, past tense and person agreement morphemes in (2) is perfectly grammatical:
(1) limon ve portakal-lar
lemon and orange-PL
'lemon and oranges' (Non-SA-reading)
'lemons and oranges' (SA-reading)
(Kornfilt and Whitman, 2001)
(2) [Zengin ve ünlü]-y-dü-m.
rich and famous-cop-past-1sg
'I was rich and famous.'
(Lewis, 1967)
Participants
- Judith Aissen, Emerita, UC Santa Cruz
- Hilda Koopman, UCLA
- Aaron Broadwell, SUNY Albany
- Jorge Hankamer, UC Santa Cruz
- Kunio Nishiyama, Ibaraki University
- Rolf Noyer, UPenn
- James Yoon, University of Illinois
- Draga Zec, Cornell University
- John Whitman, Cornell University
- Jaklin Kornfilt, Syracuse University
- Miloje Despic, Cornell University
Organizers:
John Whitman, Cornell University
Jaklin Kornfilt, Syracuse University
Sponsored by:
The Upstate Humanities Corridor, Central New York; The Department of Linguistics, Cornell University; and NINJAL
Registration:
Registration is free. To register, please send an email to ek362@cornell.edu with the subject line "Registration" and your name and affiliation. Thanks!