- Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
SPEAKING OUR LANGUAGE 2019: A diachronic look at Rhotics in the Scottish Gaelic of the Isle of Lewis
Seumus MacDonald, University of Aberdeen - Geography Building 126
An analysis of the introduction of delicate talk
Prabjote Kaur, York St John University - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
I Wanna Be Like You-hoo-hoo
Francesca Ashley-Wheeler, University of Aberdeen - Geography Building 126
Diachronic Investigation of Corpus into Classifier Reduplication in Mandarin Chinese
Weijia Wang, University of Manchester - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
San Diu – is it a dialect of Cantonese or is it something else?
Matthew Sung, University of Edinburgh - Geography Building 126
The Evolution of Hierarchy: Language, Tool Use, and Planning in Early Hominids
Lillian Chase, University of Edinburgh - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
By berrt or by caaar? Bridging the divide of dialect perceptions in Grimsby and Hull
Scott Brummit, University of Sheffield - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
The anatomy of disagreement in University seminars
Sharmin Choudhury, York St John University - Geography Building 126
“I find this phrase puzzling”: A shared cognitive domain for vision and language
Griffith Tai, University of Edinburgh - Geography Building 126
Mid vowel variation in Leith, Edinburgh
Nina Markl, University of Edinburgh - Geography Building 126
Comprehending complex subject-verb dependencies: just a matter of restriction costs?
Catinca Buciuleac, University College London - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
Ethnopoetic Treatment to Tukano Narratives of the Ye’pârã-Oyé põ’ra Clan of the Upper Rio Negro
Dora Azvedo, University of São Paulo - Geography Building 126
“Women don’t have penises.”: The discourse of transphobia on the online parenting forum Mumsnet
Alice Pennington, York St John University - Geography Building Drapers Lecture Theatre
How to Tell a Good Story: The Relevance of Clarkian Layering in ‘Storytelling’
Jake Piper, York St John University - Geography Building 126
Ships as vessels of language change: 18th century maritime language contact and lexical diffusion
Julia Cass Hebron, University of York