Center for the Study of Language and Information
Japanese/Korean Linguistics, Volume 26
9781684000654
          9781684000630
      
      
    Distributed for Center for the Study of Language and Information
Japanese/Korean Linguistics, Volume 26
          Japanese and Korean are typologically similar, with linguistic phenomena in one often having counterparts in the other. The Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference provides a forum for research, particularly through comparative study, of both languages. This volume includes essays on the phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, historical linguistics, discourse analysis, prosody, and psycholinguistics of both languages. This volume will be a useful tool for any researcher or student in either field.
      
    Table of Contents
PART I: Phonetics and Phonology  Default Word Prosody and its Effects on Morphology HARUO KUBOZONO (KEYNOTE SPEAKER)  Epistemic Bias Interacts with Prosodic Pattern in South Gyeongsang Korean HYUN KYUNG HWANG Register-Specific Phonology in Core Grammar: Expressive Strategies in Korean Aegyo HAYEUN JANG  Orthography Dependence of Korean Speakers on Adaptation of English Unstressed Syllable HYOJU KIM  Tokyo Japanese Speakers’ Multimodal Perception in Voicing Contrast HYUNSOON KIM, TAKEKI KAMIYAMA AND PIERRE HALLÉ  Compound Truncation in Japanese: 2+2, 2+1, or Discontiguous 2+2? YU TANAKA  The Effects of Era and Perceptual Distinctiveness on Japanese Loanword Adaptation WENTING TANG AND JIE ZHANG   PART II: Syntax and Semantics  Determiner Phrase: How Nominals are Built and How Variant Orders Are Derived MIN-JOO KIM (KEYNOTE SPEAKER)  Negation in Korean Time Measure Constructions PAOLA CEPEDA AND JIWON YUN  Transitive Nominals in Japanese and the Syntax of Predication SHIN FUKUDA  A Temporal Restriction in the Semantics of Evidence YUTO HIRAYAMA  Double Relative Clauses in Korean EUN HEE KIM, SEA HEE CHOI, JUNGHWAN MAENG, HA RAM KIM, NAYOUNG KIM, NAKYUNG YOON AND JAMES YOON   The English Rise-Fall-Rise Contour and the Japanese Contrastive Particle Wa: A Uniform Account DAVID YOSHIKAZU OSHIMA  How to (Not) Say to ‘Say’ HIROAKI SAITO  Two Types of Sino-Korean Verb Formation: How do Verbs Determine Their Adicity? CHANGGUK YIM   PART III: Experimental Studies  What Children See is Not What They Get YOSHIKI FUJIWARA AND HIROYUKI SHIMADA  Embedded Topicalization in Korean Factive Clauses and Islands: Experimental Approach EUNSUN JOU  Directness of Causation and Morphosyntactic Complexity of Constructions: Japanese and Korean Cases KAZUHIRO KAWACHI, SANG-HEE PARK AND ERIKA BELLINGHAM  Honorific Mismatch in Korean Gapping: An Experimental Study CHAE-EUN LEE, DUK-HO JUNG AND JEONG-SEOK KIM  Experimental Study of Inter-Language and Inter-Generational Intelligibility: Methodology and Case Studies of Ryukyuan Languages  MASAHIRO YAMADA, YUKINORI TAKUBO, SHOICHI IWASAKI, CELIK KENAN, SOICHIRO HARADA, NOBUKO KIBE, TYLER LAU, NATSUKO NAKAGAWA, YUTO NIINAGA, TOMOYO OTSUKI, MANAMI SATO, RIHITO SHIRATA, GIJS VAN DER LUBBE AND AKIKO YOKOYAMA   PART IV: Functional Approach  Genitals in Japanese: Eroticism, Cuteness, and Sexist Conceptual Metaphor  CAREY BENOM Korean Evidential –te, the Past Tense –ess, and the Commitment of the Speaker SEMOON HOE, YUGYEONG PARK, DONGSIK LIM AND CHUNGMIN LEE  ‘I came,’ ‘I saw,’ ‘I am’: Deictic Conceptions Behind Experience Report and Disclosure KATSUNOBU IZUTSU, TAKESHI KOGUMA AND YONGTAEK KIM  Subjectivity and Referent Honorific Markers in Japanese KAZUE KANNO  PART V: Grammaticalization   Another Type of List Buoys in Japanese Sign Language: Emergence from Gesture YUKO ASADA  Grammaticalization of Korean mwusun ‘what kind of’ HYE SEUNG LEE  On the Emergence of Discourse Markers of Emphasis in Korean SEONGHA RHEE  From a Clause-Combining Conjunction to a Sentence-Initial Adverbial Connector in the History of Japanese: With Special Attention to totan (-ni) ‘at the moment’ REIJIROU SHIBASAKI  From Manner to Pseudo-Quotation: The Grammaticalization of Korean sik (‘style, manner’) and Japanese fuu (‘wind, manner’) KIM YEWON AND KAORU HORIE   PART VI: Conversation Analysis  Imperatives in Ordinary Talk: Turn Designs, Embodied actions, and Sequences in Korean Interaction MARY SHIN KIM (KEYNOTE SPEAKER)   Pragmatic Uses of the Korean Sentence Ender -Na/-(u)Nka SEUNGGON JEONG AND EUN YOUNG BAE  Preference Organization and Sequence-Responding Actions HEE JU  Poster Session Abstracts