With the first linguistics department to be established in North America (in 1901), Berkeley has a rich and distinguished tradition of rigorous linguistic documentation and theoretical innovation, making it an exciting and fulfilling place to carry out linguistic research. Its original mission, due to the anthropologist Alfred Kroeber and the Sanskrit and Dravidian scholar Murray B. Emeneau, was the recording and describing of unwritten languages, especially American Indian languages spoken in California and elsewhere in the United States. The current Department of Linguistics continues this tradition, integrating careful, scholarly documentation with cutting-edge theoretical work in phonetics, phonology and morphology; syntax, semantics, and pragmatics; psycholinguistics; sociolinguistics and anthropological linguistics; historical linguistics; typology; and cognitive linguistics.
Current Issue, Volume 41, 2015
Asymmetries in Long-Distance QR
Tanaka, Misako
Case-Marking in Estonian Pseudopartitives
Norris, Mark
The Cross-linguistic Distribution of Sign Language Parameters
Tatman, Rachael
Cultural Transmission of Self-Concept from Parent to Child in Chinese American Families: Does Language Matter?
Williams, Aya; Chen, Stephen; Zhou, Qing
Discourse Coherence and Relativization in Korean
Park, Sang-Hee
Exhaustivity, Predication and the Semantics of Movement
Klecha, Peter; Martinović, Martina
A Field Method to Describe Spontaneous Motion Events in Japanese
Ishibashi, Miyuki
Fruits for Animals: Hunting Avoidance Speech Style in Murui (Witoto, Northwest Amazonia)
Wojtylak, Katarzyna Izabela
Gradability and Mimetic Verbs in Japanese: A Frame-Semantic Account
Kiyama, Naoki; Akita, Kimi
Homophony and Contrast Neutralization in Southern Min Tone Sandhi Circle
Tsui, Tsz-Him
The Imperative Split and the Origin of Switch-Reference Markers in Nungon
Sarvasy, Hannah
Intensification and Sociolinguistic Variation: A Corpus Study
Beltrama, Andrea
Labial Harmonic Shift in Kazakh: Mapping the Pathways and Motivations for Decay
McCollum, Adam G
Negotiating Lexical Uncertainty and Speaker Expertise with Disjunction
Potts, Christopher; Levy, Roger
The No Blur Principle Effects as an Emergent Property of Language Systems
Ackerman, Farrell; Malouf, Robert
Non-canonical Noun Incorporation in Bzhedug Adyghe
Ershova, Ksenia
On the Derivation of Relative Clauses in Teotitlán del Valle Zapotec
Kalivoda, Nick; Zyman, Erik
Patterns of Misperception of Arabic Consonants
Sanker, Chelsea
Perceptual Distribution of Merging Phonemes
Freeman, Valerie
Phonological Opacity in Pendau: A Local Constraint Conjunction Analysis
Chen, Yan
Pluractionality and the Stative vs. Eventive Contrast in Ranmo
Lee, Jenny
Proximal Demonstratives in Predicate NPs
Doran, Ryan B; Ward, Gregory
A Quest for Linguistic Authenticity: Cantonese and Putonghua in Postcolonial Hong Kong
Wong, Andrew D
Reevaluating the Diphthong Mergers in Japono-Ryukyuan
Lau, Tyler
Reference to Situation Content in Uyghur Auxiliary bolmaq
McKenzie, Andrew; Eziz, Gülnar; Major, Travis
Second Position and "Floating" Clitics in Wakhi
Fuchs, Zuzanna
Some Causative Alternations in K'iche', and a Unified Syntactic Derivation
Gluckman, John
Syntax of Generic Null Objects Revisited
Dvořák, Věra
Tagalog Sluicing Revisited
Borise, Lena
The 'Whole' Story of Partitive Quantification
Greer, Kristen A