- Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
‘Curating’ stories: A critical narrative analysis of social media apps
Alexandra Georgakopoulou, King’s College London - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
An Investigation into the phonology of Tanka Cantonese
Priscilla Lam, University of Edinburgh - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
Grammar politics and construction machines: Reading Deleuze and Guattari into construction grammar
Alex Redpath, University of Edinburgh - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
Is Arbitrariness a Design Feature of the Sign?
Tom Williamson, Lancaster University - Geography Building 126
A Bilingual in Marseille: Regional Aspects and Adolescent Speech
Pauline Blanchet, SOAS - Geography Building 126
A phonetic investigation of the tonal properties of Singlish discourse particles
Rhosanna Rigden, University of Cambridge - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
Humanoid Robots, Autism Spectrum Disorder and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Macarena Chiclana, Queen Mary University of London - Geography Building 126
Putting it in writing (astR nou fr ecrire Kreol): Ideology, standardization and CMC in Mauritian Creole
Isabelle Yeung Yuen Tai, University of Edinburgh - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
Towards a model of conversational coherence: its potential for the automatic evaluation of dialogue systems
Alexandra Burchill, University of Cambridge - Geography Building 126
T-Glottaling and Nina Nesbitt: A Comparative and Intraspeaker Analysis of Speech and Song
Brandon Papineau, University of Edinburgh - Geography Building 126
Thinking in Gender: Language and Association
Maria Ples, Queen Mary University of London - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
There's a verb gone missing: Past participle reduced relatives in colloquial English narrative structures
Jamie Bailey, University of Cambridge - Geography Building 126
Does L2 Japanese affect L1 English?
Jasmine Chapman, York St John University - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
The Asymmetry and Antisymmetry of Syntax: A Relational Approach to Displacement
Justin Malčić, University of Cambridge