Linguistics

Closing Date: 
31/10/2009

Full Title: Morphological Complexity

Date: 22-Jan-2010 - 22-Jan-2010
Location: Cambridge, MA, USA
Contact Person: Matthew Baerman
Meeting Email: morphological.complexity@googlemail.com
Web Site: http://www.morphology.surrey.ac.uk/Workshop.htm

Linguistic Field(s): Morphology; Syntax

Call Deadline: 31-Oct-2009

Meeting Description:

The Surrey Morphology Group (University of Surrey, UK) and the Department of
Linguistics at Harvard University will host a one-day workshop entitled
'Morphological Complexity: Implications for the Theory of Language', as part of

Discipline: 
Tags: 

Full Title: Morphological Complexity

Date: 22-Jan-2010 - 22-Jan-2010
Location: Cambridge, MA, USA
Contact Person: Matthew Baerman
Meeting Email: morphological.complexity@googlemail.com
Web Site: http://www.morphology.surrey.ac.uk/Workshop.htm

Linguistic Field(s): Morphology; Syntax

Call Deadline: 31-Oct-2009

Meeting Description:

The Surrey Morphology Group (University of Surrey, UK) and the Department of
Linguistics at Harvard University will host a one-day workshop entitled
'Morphological Complexity: Implications for the Theory of Language', as part of

Tags: 
Discipline: 

project: Epidoc Aphrodisias Project (EPAPP)

The Epidoc Aphrodisias Project was launched in 2002 to develop and apply tools for presenting ancient Greek and Latin inscriptions on the Internet. With support from the Leverhulme Trust, as part of their Research Interchange Scheme, researchers from Europe, the U.S. and the U.K. [read more]

project: Anglo-Saxon Language of Landscape (LangScape)

The aim of the LangScape Project is to make accessible over the web a rich body of material relating to the English countryside of a thousand years ago and more, using estate boundaries - detailed descriptions by those who lived in and worked the Anglo-Saxon landscape. The completed website - an electronic corpus of Anglo-saxon boundary clauses with extensive XML mark-up - will be a powerful research tool with applications within a broad range of academic disciplines. It will also be designed with a view to its ongoing development for public and schools use. [read more]

project: Integrating Digital Papyrology (IDP)

Among humanistic fields, papyrology is notably well provided with digital resources for access to primary texts, metadata, and images of the papyri, ostraca, and tablets preserved in Greek, Latin, Arabic, various forms of ancient Egyptian, and several other languages. Over the past couple of years the two most important digital papyrological projects based in North America, the Advanced Papyrological Information System (APIS) and the Duke Databank of Documentary Papyri (DDbDP) have developed plans for integrating and sustaining the two projects. [read more]

5th Australasian Ontology Workshop (AOW 2009)
1 December 2009
Held in Conjunction with the

Discipline: 

The Congress is an annual gathering of over 3,000 scholars interested in Medieval Studies. It features over 600 sessions of papers, panel discussions, roundtables, workshops, and performances. There are also some 90 business meetings and receptions sponsored by learned societies, associations, and institutions. The exhibits hall boasts nearly 70 exhibitors, including publishers, used book dealers, and purveyors of medieval sundries. The Congress lasts three and a half days, extending from Thursday morning until Sunday at noon.

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