Cornell Linguistics Publications


Date: Thu, 1 Feb 1996 17:50:06 -0500
From: jds18@cornell.edu (Justin Spence)
Subject: CLC Publications current catalog


The following is a complete listing of our current publications.  This is
intended to update the listing under cornell.lst, formerly the listing for
DMLL Publications, which is now CLC Publications.  If you have any
questions please contact me at jds18@cornell.edu.


**********************************************
CORNELL LINGUISTICS PUBLICATIONS
e-mail: books@plab.dmll.cornell.edu

Ordering information is at the end of this file.  This file was last updated
on February 1, 1996.


Cornell publishes several series:
   Cornell dissertations in linguistics
   Cornell Working Papers in Linguistics
   Working Papers of the Cornell Phonetics Laboratories
   ESCOL Proceedings
   SALT Proceedings
We welcome standing orders for any of these series.


CORNELL DISSERTATIONS IN LINGUISTICS
These editions are reformatted and printed as trade paperback books, and
many are slightly updated from the versions originally submitted to Cornell.

Maher Bahloul
THE SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS OF TAXIS, ASPECT, TENSE AND MODALITY
IN STANDARD ARABIC
The dissertation investigates various aspects of clausal interpretation
and structure in Arabic with a particular reference to such grammatical
categories as Taxis, Aspect, Tense and Modality.  The findings indicate
that while Taxis and Aspect are inherent to verbal forms, Tense has
rather sentential properties.  Moreover, a detailed analysis of the
verbal particle QAD reveals that it denotes assertive modality and
patterns with negation, a category with which it heads a phrasal
projection called 'Assertive Phrase'.  (Submitted 1994, published 1994)
$15.00 for students, $17.00 for non-students

Hedi M. Belazi
MULTILINGUALISM IN TUNISIA AND FRENCH/ARABIC CODE SWITCHING
AMONG EDUCATED TUNISIAN BILINGUALS
This thesis deals with such sociolinguistic issues as bilingualism,
diglossia, code switching, and attitudes of educated Tunisians toward these
phenomena.  It also attempts to posit a principled account of the grammar
of French-Arabic code switching among educated Tunisian bilinguals.
(Submitted 1991, published 1992)
$13.00 for students, $15.00 for non-students

Ann R. Bradlow
LANGUAGE-SPECIFIC AND UNIVERSAL ASPECTS OF VOWEL PRODUCTION AND
PERCEPTION: A CROSS-LINGUISTIC STUDY OF VOWEL INVENTORIES
This thesis examines in parallel the production and perception of
the vowels of English and Spanish.  By examining the acoustic and
perceptual characteristics of the vowel systems of two languages
that differ in the size of their vowel inventories, this study
reveals some of the language-specific and universal principles
that determine the acoustic and perceptual structure of vowel systems.
(Submitted 1994, published 1994)
$12.00 for students, $14.00 for non-students

Katharine Davis
PHONETIC AND PHONOLOGICAL CONTRASTS IN THE ACQUISITION OF
VOICING: A LINGUISTIC AND DEVELOPMENTAL STUDY OF VOICE ONSET TIME
PRODUCTION IN HINDI AND ENGLISH
The results of this study suggest that acoustic differences between
phonemes predict developmental patterns of contrastive production better
than feature specifications of the phonemes.  A new model of phonological
acquisition incorporating these results with three levels of psychological
representation (acoustic, featural, and segmental) is presented.  Also
discussed are a redefinition of voice onset time and the role of breathy
voice in the Hindi voiced aspirates.  (Submitted 1991, published 1992)
$14.00 for students, $16.00 for non-students

Tamar I. Kaplan
THE SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION OF FUNCTIONAL CATEGORIES:
COMPLEMENTIZER PHRASES IN ENGLISH AND JAPANESE
This dissertation contains a discussion of CP structures in English and
Japanese, and the results of a nine-month longitudinal study of the second
language acquisition of Japanese CP structures by English speakers.  The
author uses the results of her study to (1) argue against the maturational
hypothesis of first language acquisition, and (2) argue for the use of secon=
d
language acquisition research to determine the validity of theoretical
proposals in the realms of syntactic theory and first language acquisition.
The author also discusses implications of these results for the use of
grammaticality judgement and elicited imitation tasks in second language
acquisition research.  (Submitted 1993, published 1993)
$13.00 for students, $15.00 for non-students

Yetunde Olabisi Laniran
INTONATION IN TONE LANGUAGES: THE PHONETIC IMPLEMENTATION OF TONE IN
YORUBA
This experimental investigation of Yoruba intonation increases our
understanding of the interface between phonology and phonetics.
Left-to-right downstep relationship between H and L tones in alternating
HL tone sequences is analyzed as right-to-left upstep.  This upstep
analysis also explains the long-distance dependency between H tones and
L tones that are not adjacent.  Finally, it is argues that phonetic rules
have access to a "window" of at least the first intonational phrase in
the sentence.  (Submitted 1992, published 1994)
$14.00 for students, $16.00 for non-students

Enrique Mallen
THE INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF DETERMINER PHRASES
It is argued that post-nominal de-phrases in Spanish are not evenly linked a=
s
sisters of a single projection, but rather are distributed in hierarchically
distinct positions. Thus the internal configuration of NPs is parallel to
that of VPs. Moreover, it is proposed that this parallelism can be extended
to nominal functional categories: NP is dominated by two functional heads,
D(eterminer) corresponding to the sentential C(omplementizer) and Q(uantifie=
r)
corresponding to the sentential I(nflection).  The linear distribution of
nominal arguments is attributed to the directionality of case and thematic
role assignment.  (Submitted 1989, published 1992)
$16.00 for students, $18.00 for non-students

Erika Jeane Mitchell
MORPHOLOGICAL EVIDENCE FOR SYNTACTIC STRUCTURE: THE
=46INNO-UGRIC LANGUAGES AND ENGLISH
This thesis examines the inventory of the verbal functional
categories and their relative ordering in the Finno-Ugric
languages and English.  Of the functional categories, the
relative order of Tense and Mood is found to vary across
languages, while the order of Aspect, Voice, and Negation
appears to be fixed.  Agreement is found to be relational
rather than functional.  Detailed appendices contain
complete verbal paradigms and the corresponding syntactic
structures for each of the Finno-Ugric languages and English.
(Submitted 1993, published 1994)
$18.00 for students, $20.00 for non-students

Susana Sainz
A NONCYCLIC APPROACH TO THE LEXICAL PHONOLOGY OF ENGLISH
The focus of this dissertation is a noncyclic analysis of English stress and
vowel shortening processes.  Central questions addressed are the interaction
of phonology and morphology and the status of the phonological cycle as
proposed in the theory of Lexical Phonology, where an intrinsic cyclic
interaction is claimed to exist between at least some morphological strata
and the phonological component. (Submitted 1992, published 1992)
$12.00 for students, $14.00 for non-students

David James Silva
THE PHONETICS AND PHONOLOGY OF STOP LENITION IN KOREAN
This study investigates the phonetic and phonological behavior of the Korean
stop consonants when they occur in positions traditionally described as site=
s
for lenition. Acoustic data collected by the author indicate that the
weakening of stops between sonorants is conditioned by the target segment's
phonation characteristics and its position in the prosodic hierarchy.  Based
on these data, a new account for phonological and phonetic lenition is
proposed, one that views lenition as a process whereby segments undergo a
loss of structure.  (Submitted 1992, published 1992)
$13.00 for students, $15.00 for non-students

Alice Elizabeth Turk
EFFECTS OF POSITION-IN-SYLLABLE AND STRESS ON CONSONANT
ARTICULATION
This is an x-ray microbeam study of the effects of position-in-syllable and
stress on stop consonant articulation.  The results provide phonetic evidenc=
e
for the ambisyllabicity of intervocalic consonants preceding unstressed
vowels.  A new methodology for measuring consonant articulation is also
introduced.  (Submitted 1993, published 1993)
$14.00 for students, $16.00 for non-students



CORNELL WORKING PAPERS IN LINGUISTICS
Tables of contents for all volumes are available via e-mail.

VOLUMES 1-8 are currently out of print.  Photocopies of these volumes are
available for $14.00.

VOLUME 9, FALL 1991: PAPERS ON NONCANONICAL CASE ASSIGNMENT
This volume contains papers by Leonard H. Babby, John F. Bailyn, John F.
Bailyn and Edward J. Rubin, Wayne E. Harbert and Almeida J. Toribio,
Erika Mitchell, Lelwala Sumangala, and Tomoyuki Yoshida.
$10.00

VOLUME 10, FALL 1991: PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST SEMANTICS AND
LINGUISTIC
THEORY CONFERENCE (SALT I).
SALT I was held at Cornell University, April 19-21, 1991.  This volume
contains papers by John Bowers, Rose-Marie Dechaine, Edit Doron, Jan
van Eijck and Fer-Jan de Vries, Kai von Fintel, Manfred Krifka, Barbara
H. Partee, Paul Portner, Craige Roberts, and Veneeta Srivastav.
$10.00

VOLUME 11, FALL 1993
Isabella Barbier, On the Syntax of Dutch er.
Laurent P. Dekydtspotter, Ne que and the Theory of Focus.
Natalia Diaz-Insense, Extraction from DP in Catalan and Strong Crossover.
Ruriko Kawashima, The Structure of Noun Phrases: Arguments for
        Quantifier Phrase and Number Phrase.
Ignazio M. Mirto, Ergativity in Malagasy.
Erika Mitchell, VP-fronting, Do-Support and Extended IP in English.
Takashi Nakajima, Syntactic Analysis of the Light Verb Construction.
Almeida Jacqueline Toribio, Lexical Subjects in Finite and Non-Finite Clause=
s.
Deborah Yeager, The Position of Quantifiers in Old English Nominals
$12.00

VOLUME 12, SPRING 1994: PAPERS ON NEGATION
Michael Bernstein, Some Notes on Infinitives and Negation in English.
Claire Foley, Negation and the Tense-Agreement Relationship in French and
English.
Regina Hauptmann, Sentential Negation in German: Evidence for NegP.
Luis Lopez, The Hierarchy of Negation and Tense in English.
Erika Mitchell, On the Position of NegP in English and the Status of Not.
Zelmira Nunez del Prado and James Gair, The Position of Negation
in Bengali: An account of synchronic and diachronic variation.
Lynn Santelmann, Evidence for NegP and Object Shift in German.
Margarita Suner, Negation and the Features of Comp.
Eun-Young Yi, NegP in Korean.
$12.00

VOLUME 13, SPRING 1995
Theresa Antes, Christine Moritz, and Regina Roebuck, Input and
Parameter Resetting in Second Language Acquisition.
Barbara I. Avila-Jimenez, A Sociolinguistic Analysis of a Change
in Progress:  Pronominal Overtness in Puerto Rican Spanish.
Yafei Li and Chioko Takahashi, On the Logophoric AND Syntactic
Nature of Reflexivization.
Kunio Nishiyama,  Sluicing without Wh-Movement.
Zelmira Nunez del Prado, On Predicate-Chains and Binding of
DP-Contained Pronouns.
David Parkinson, Iterated Subject Agreement in Standard Arabic.
Emily E. Scida, Intransitive Verbs and the Retroherent Feature
in Old Italian and Old Spanish Texts.

WORKING PAPERS OF THE CORNELL PHONETICS LABORATORY (WPCPL)
Tables of contents for all volumes are available via e-mail.

VOLUME 1, DECEMBER 1983
This volume contains papers by Mary Beckman, Susan R. Hertz, and Osamu
=46ujimura; Susan R. Hertz; Mary Beckman and Atsuko Shoji; Stuart Milliken;
and Katharine Davis and Mary Beckman.
$4.00

VOLUME 2, APRIL 1988: RESEARCH IN LABORATORY PHONOLOGY
This volume contains papers by G.N. Clements; Susan R. Hertz; and John
Kingston.
$7.00

VOLUME 3, JUNE 1988: STRESS, TONE AND INTONATION
Susana Sainz, A Noncyclic Analysis of English Word Stress; Chi-lin Shih,
Tone and Intonation in Mandarin.
$6.00

VOLUME 4, DECEMBER 1990
Rukayyah S. Herzallah
Aspect of Palestinian Arabic Phonology: a Nonlinear Approach
1990 Ph.D. dissertation.  This dissertation provides an analysis of vowel to
consonant assimilation in Palestinian Arabic within a multi-tiered
phonological representation.  In particular, emphasis is considered a double
secondary articulation consisting of the two independent features [dorsal]
and [pharyngeal].
$8.00

VOLUME 5, SEPTEMBER 1991: PHONETIC AND PHONOLOGICAL STUDIES ON
VOWEL FEATURES
This volume contains papers by Khathatso Evelyn Khabanyane and by G.N.
Clements.
$8.00

VOLUME 6, OCTOBER 1991
Elizabeth W.-Y. Leung
The Tonal Phonology of Llogoori: a Study of Llogoori Verbs
1986 M.A. thesis. This thesis is a study of the Llogoori language of Kenya,
providing both a detailed presentation of its major phonological and
morphological features and one of the first comprehensive non-linear
treatments of a Bantu language.
$8.00

VOLUME 7, MARCH 1992
G.N. Clements, Phonological Primes: Gestures or Features?  A.C. Cohn, The
Consequences of Dissimilation in Sundanese.  B. Goodman, Takelma
Dissimilation and the Form of the OCP.  H.B.C. Capo, The Bilabial Fricatives
of Ewe: Innovation or Retention?  A.R. Bradlow, On the Representation of
Clicks.  A. Turk, The American English Flapping Rule and the Effect of Stres=
s
on Stop Consonant Duration.  S.R. Hertz, The Timing of Phones and
Transitions: A Nucleus-Based Model of English Duration.  J. Sereno and A.
Jongman, Phonetic Priming Effects in Auditory Word Recognition.
$8.00

VOLUME 8, DECEMBER 1993
Michael Jessen, Stress conditions on vowel quality and quantity in German.
Ann R. Bradlow, A cross-language comparison of vowel production and
perception: language-specific and universal aspects.  Corinne B. Moore,
Phonetic observations on stress and tones in Mandarin Chinese.  Joan A.
Sereno and Allard Jongman, Acoustic correlates of form class.  Abigail C.
Cohn, A survey of the phonology of the feature [+/-nasal].  Sharon Inkelas a=
nd
Draga Zec, Auxiliary reduction without empty categories: a prosodic account.
$10.00

VOLUME 9, DECEMBER 1994
Jonathan Alcantara, Rethinking English vowel alternation.
Ioana Chitoran, Acoustic investigation of Georgian harmonic clusters.
Abigail C. Cohn and Katherine Lockwood, A phonetic description of Madurese
and its phonological implications.
Kenneth De Jong, On the status of redundant features: The case
of backing and rounding in American English.
Jeong-Im Han, Perceptual cues for Korean tense and lax consonants.
Hyunsoon Kim and Allard Jongman, Complete neutralization of manner of
articulation in Korean.
Rebecca Letterman, A phonetic study of Sinhala syllable rhymes.
Ayako Tsuchida, Fricative-vowel coarticulation in Japanese devoiced
syllables: Acoustic
and perceptual evidence.
Draga Zec, Footed tones and tonal feet: Rhythmic constituency in a pitch
accent language.
$11.00

VOLUME 10, DECEMBER 1995

Abigail C. Cohn, Phonetics and Phonology
Abigail C. Cohn, Privativity, underspecification, and consequences
  for an adequate theory of phonetic implementation
Antony Green, The prosodic structure of Burmese: a
  constraint-based approach
Corinne B. Moore, Speaker normalization in the perception of
  Mandarin Chinese tones
Ayako Tsuchida, English loans in Japanese: constraints in loanword
  phonology
Ratree Wayland, Non-native productions of Thai: acoustic
  measurements and accentedness ratings



ESCOL PROCEEDINGS
(Eastern States Conference on Linguistics)
Tables of contents for all volumes are available via e-mail.

ESCOL '84-'91
These volumes, originally published by The Ohio State University, are now
available through Cornell.
$10.00 for students, $12.00 for non-students

ESCOL '92
The Ninth Eastern States Conference on Linguistics was held at the State
University of New York, Buffalo, November 13-15, 1992.  This proceedings
contains 26 papers from the conference.
$15.00 for students, $17.00 for non-students

ESCOL '93
The Tenth Eastern States Conference on Linguistics was held at The Ohio
State University, August 6-8, 1993.  This proceedings contains 34 papers
from the conference.
$18.00 for students, $20.00 for non-students

ESCOL '94

The Eleventh Eastern States Conference on Linguistics was held at the
University of South Carolina from September 30-October 2, 1994.  The
proceedings volume contains 25 papers from the following authors:
Rakesh Mohan Bhatt; Young-Hyung Cho; Eve V. Clark; Stephen Crain, Laura
Conway, and Rosalind Thornton; Piroska Cs=FAri; William D. Davies; Marie C.
Egan and A. Ren=E9 Schmauder; Jason Eisner; David Embick and Roumanya
Izvorski; Patrick Farrell; Astrid Ferdinand; Robert Hamilton; Ho Han and
Myung-Kwan Park; Rebecca Herman; Gregory K. Iverson and Shinsook Lee; Luis
L=F3pez; Hideki Maki; Yoichi Miyamoto; Alan Munn; Seungho Nam; Elizabeth J.
Pyatt; Hotze Rullmann; Uli Sauerland; Cristina Schmitt; Carson T. Sch=FCtze;
Rosalind Thornton; Rachel Walker; and Gert Webelhuth and Farrell Ackerman.

Students: $18.00; non-students: $20.00


SALT PROCEEDINGS
(Semantics and Linguistic Theory)
Tables of contents are available via e-mail.

SALT I
see Cornell Working Papers in Linguistics Volume 10.
$10.00

SALT II
available from The Ohio State University
Contact claudias@humanities1.cohums.ohio-state.edu for
ordering information.

SALT III
This volume contains papers by Chris Barker, Dorit Ben-Shalom, Laurent
Pierre Aime Dekydtspotter, Patrick Farrell, Elena Herburger, Ruriko Kawashima
and Hisatsugu Kitahara, Edward L. Keenan, Peter Lasersohn, Gillian Catriona
Ramchand, Karina Wilkinson, and Ton van der Wouden and Frans Zwart.
$12.00 for students, $14.00 for non-students

SALT IV
This volume contains papers by Nicholas Asher and Pierre Sablayrolles;
Emmon Bach; David Beaver; Mary Dalrymple, Makato Kanazawa, Sam Mchombo
and Stanley Peters; Paul Dekker; Viviane D=E9prez; David Dowty; Jack Hoeksem=
a;
Pauline Jacobson; Emiel Krahmer and Reinhard Muskens; Manfred Krifka;
William A. Ladusaw; Sally McConnell-Ginet; Toshiyuki Ogihara; Matthias Paul;
Massimo Poesio.
$18.00 for students, $20.00 for non-students

SALT V
This volume contains papers by Chris Barker; Reinhard Blutner; Daniel
B=FCring; Giulia Centineo; Veneeta Dayal; Anastasia Giannakidou; Jeroen
Groenendijk, Martin Stokhof and Frank Veltman; Eric Jackson; Yookyung Kim
and Stanley Peters; Utpal Lahiri; Knud Lambrecht; Alex Lascarides and Ann
Copestake; Jan Lerner and Manfred Pinkal; Claudia Maienborn; Friederike
Moltmann; Toshiyuki Ogihara; Robin Schafer; Anatoli Strigin; Satoshi
Tomioka; Myriam Uribe-Etxebarria; Arnim von Stechow; Yoad Winter; and Joost
Zwarts.
Students: $18.00; non-students: $20.00

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