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DEALLers participating at the 36th North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics (NACCL-36) on 22-24 March 2024

March 17, 2024

DEALLers participating at the 36th North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics (NACCL-36) on 22-24 March 2024

NACCL-36
DEALLers past and present are presenting at the 36th North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics (NACCL-36), to be held at Pomona College, Claremont, CA. The conference has two pre-conference workshops on Friday, 22 March 2024, followed by a two-day conference over the weekend.

Current DEALL faculty and students, as well as several of our DEALL alumni will be presenting at NACCL-36.

Keynote Speaker:
 
Seth Wiener (Ph.D., 2015), Associate Professor of SLA and Chinese Studies (Carnegie Mellon University), is part of the workshop on "Academic Publishing in Linguistics and Applied Linguistics" on Friday afternoon, and he will be delivering one of the keynote lectures on Saturday, on "What We Know (and Still Don’t Know) about L2 Mandarin Speech Learning."

Panel Presentations by Current DEALLers and DEALL Alumni:
 
Marjorie K.M. Chan (The Ohio State University)
"The Little Prince in Cantonese with Jyutping: Usage of Sentence-Final Particles Across the Main Characters"

Ka Fai Law (The Ohio State University)
"Sentence-Final Particles in Two of the Cantonese Learning Materials in the 19th Century"
 
Ok Joo Lee and Kyungmin Lee (Seoul National University)
How Does Phonation Interplay with Pitch in Mandarin Tone Perception?

Caroline Norfleet (The Ohio State University)
"This Sentence 'you-mei-you' Correct? Judgments of Taiwanese-influenced Sentence Structures in Taiwan Mandarin"

Lulei Su (Brown University) and Fang Liu (Yale University)
Building Linguistic Expertise on Chinese Food, Health, and Environment
 
Paul Ueda (The Ohio State University)
"Not Your Father’s Taiwanese: Language Attitude Shifts by Taiwanese Youth"

Xuan Ye (叶璇, Indiana University Bloomington)
"对外汉语教学中植入汉语方言元素的可行性探讨—以中文电影课教学为例"

Wei William Zhou (The Ohio State University)
"Processing Chinese Monosyllabic Words: Insights from The Chinese Lexicon Project"