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Mon, 04/13/2026 - 16:05
For sixty years, applied linguistics has stood at the crossroads of language and society, by meeting real-world needs. 60 Years of Applied Linguistics: Toward more engaged research offers a compelling reflection on the field’s evolution while calling for a renewed commitment to socially responsive, ethically grounded scholarship. Inspired by the momentum of the 2023 AILA World Congress in France, this collective volume brings together leading international applied linguists to examine how

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 16:05
The source text is an unescapable part of any translation or translation process. Without source text, no translation. Yet it is only recently that scholars in the field of translation studies have begun exploring, theorizing, and conceptualizing the source text in a more systematic fashion. The present volume builds on and expands this work, exposing how source texts are never merely given but always constructed by translators and used for various purposes. The seven case studies, by researcher

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 15:05
Toponymy is the branch of Onomastics that studies place names. From among the subfields in Toponymy, in this work we focus on standardized toponymic repositories: toponymic lexical data bases. An adequate standardization of the major toponymy in the CPLP area assumes special relevance, as it embodies a normalizing function and is characterized by its enlarged scope. The Vocabulário Toponímico (VT – toponymic wordlist), studied here, is a digital toponymic resource, a specialized vocabulary that

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 15:05
2026. iii, 186 pp. Table of Contents Articles Proto-Tibetic *mbras ‘1grain; 2rice’: Comparative reconstruction and dialect subgrouping Joanna Bialek pp. 175–227 The associative plural in Cantonese Pun Ho Lui pp. 228–256 Applying popular arguments for and against an independent egophoric grammatical category to Thewo Tibetan Abe Powell pp. 257–301 Dynamics of L3 lexical representations of Dutch-English-Mandarin trilinguals Xiaowen Ji & Niels Olaf Schiller pp. 302–32

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 15:05
2025. v, 119 pp. Table of Contents Introduction Group dynamics in human–robot interaction Alessandra Sciutti, Dario Pasquali, Giulia Belgiovine & Linda Lastrico pp. 387–391 Articles Moderating multi-party conversations with social robots: Design and evaluation of control policies Lucrezia Grassi, Carmine Tommaso Recchiuto & Antonio Sgorbissa pp. 392–421 Evaluating multi-party interactions with social robots using large language models and multi-modal systems Daniel Hern

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 14:05
2026. iii, 150 pp. Table of Contents Article Multiple grammars within linguistic populations: Distributions and theoretical implications Maria Polinsky pp. 101–128 Commentaries Defining and testing multiple grammars Tania Ionin pp. 129–132 Micro-variation and multiple grammars Marit Westergaard pp. 133–136 Understanding multiple types of multiple grammars Luiz Amaral & Tom Roeper pp. 137–140 Articles Cross-linguistic influence in L3 acquisition: Investigat

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 14:05
2026. iii, 250 pp. Table of Contents Articles Distance-based approach reveals convergence effects in word order among the languages of the Circum-Baltic linguistic area Ilja A. Seržant, Berfin Aktaṣ, Maria Ovsjannikova & Manfred Stede pp. 259–293 A for antipassive, I for inverse: Rethinking transitivity and voice in Chiquitano Andrey Nikulin pp. 294–351 The size of clitics and affixes: A phonological approach to the grammaticalization cline Tim Zingler & Phillip Rogers p

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 14:05
2026. iii, 141 pp. Table of Contents Editorial The multicultural turn in sociolinguistics Shobha Satyanath pp. 1–12 Articles Are we surprised yet? Expecting the unexpected in Asia-Pacific language variation James Stanford pp. 13–38 Registers in the Bahnar dialects in Vietnam: A sociophonetic study Lư Giang Đinh, Thành Thơ Quản & Trần Quý Nguyễn pp. 39–71 Variation and change in Philippine languages: Trends, challenges, and pathways forward Wilkinson Daniel Wong Go

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 13:05
The next Nordic Speech Research Forum webinar takes place on Fri, April 17th at 12:00 - 13:00 (Helsinki/Eastern European Summer Time EEST; UCT+3). You are warmly welcome to join the event via our website https://www.jyu.fi/nsrf. The phonetic construction of good and evil from a whole-larynx perspective Míša Hejná, Aarhus University The Nordic Speech Research Forum is organized by the Speech and Speech Research Special Interest Group of the Finnish Association for Applied Linguistics (AFin

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 13:05
I enclose the link to two new interviews of the "Talking about languages series" Judith Kroll (University of California, Irvine): Bilingualism: cognitive consequences Scott Thornbury (The New School, NY): Language teaching methods. https://tv.uvigo.es/series/679a63164e20f40f98159db3

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 13:05
I am a PhD student in psycholinguistics at the University of Milano-Bicocca (Italy), and currently a visiting PhD student at Lund University (Sweden). I am recruiting Swedish native speakers who speak English as a second language for an online study on bilingualism. The study is conducted in English and explores how people think about words and what associations come to mind (for example, what words you might think of when you read or hear an English word like “lemon”). Participation involves

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 12:05
Would you like to network with other linguists and learn more about Open Science, the reproducibility and replicability of published results, good scientific practices, and how to improve the status quo in academia? Then our event series "ReproducibiliTea in the HumaniTeas" is the right place for you. Join the mailing list, drop by, share your ideas, and become part of the community. Each session begins with a 20-minute presentation or an activating mini-workshop usually led by a linguist. T

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 12:05
The Research Centre for Linguistics at NOVA University Lisbon (CLUNL) (https://clunl.fcsh.unl.pt/en/) encourages expressions of interest for applications to the Horizon Europe Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellowship Scheme (MSCA PF) financed by the European Commission from excellent postdoctoral researchers in the fields of: - Language Acquisition - Lexicology and Lexicography - Terminology - Text Theory - Discourse Analysis - Historical Linguistics - Phonology and

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 12:05
I'm a PhD student in Psychology, Linguistics and Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Milano-Bicocca, researching conceptual processing in bicultural bilinguals. I am looking for adult Italian native speakers currently residing in the UK for a psycholinguistics experiment. The experiment can be carried out fully online on a laptop, and it's a visual world eye-tracking study. It lasts approximately 45-60 minutes. Here is the link to participate: https://www.labvanced.com/player.h

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 11:05
Focus: The NYI Global Institute of Cultural, Cognitive and Linguistic Study is an interdisciplinary institute focusing on theoretical linguistics, cognitive science, and global cultural studies. V-NYI is the real-time, live, global version of NYI, now entering its 12th session this summer V-NYI #12 is open to students, artists, scholars and all curious minds, from all backgrounds and countries, interested in comparative and formal approaches to theoretical linguistics as well as race, ethnici

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 11:05
I am a PhD student in Linguistics at the University of Kansas conducting research on sentence interpretation in Russian second language learners and in Russian heritage speakers. I am currently seeking participants for a study that involves a judgment task asking participants to decide if sentences are appropriate or not. Russian instructors teaching upper-division courses are warmly encouraged to share this information with their students. We are recruiting two different groups of partic

Mon, 04/13/2026 - 11:05
Focus: ‘Stylistics: Back to the Future?’ We are delighted that the Poetics and Linguistics Association (PALA) annual Summer School will this year be taught by: - Katie Wales, Honorary Professor, School of English, University of Nottingham, UK. - Michael Toolan, Emeritus Professor of English Language, University of Birmingham, UK. Katie Wales is one of PALA’s founding members and Michael Toolan is one of PALA’s longest-standing members. This is a rare opportunity to study with two ma

Sun, 04/12/2026 - 16:05
SUMMARY The Cambridge Element Language, Gender and Pregnancy Loss by Beth Malory explores how language describes and shapes experiences of pregnancy loss in healthcare contexts in the UK. The book analyzes how terminology reflects pregnancy loss and how the language used affects individuals experiencing clinical pregnancy loss. It also discusses the negative impacts of certain pregnancy loss terms, as well as the ideologies surrounding reproductive norms. The analysis draws on data from 42 UK

Fri, 04/10/2026 - 18:05
SUMMARY Data-intensive investigations of English (edited by Mikko Laitinen and Paula Rautionaho) consists of ten chapters, all of which address state-of-the-art data-intensive approaches in linguistic research. It includes an introductory chapter by the editors that presents the volume, eight chapters by different authors that report on data-intensive studies across various linguistic disciplines, and a final chapter that discusses issues in data analysis related to such approaches. Among the

Fri, 04/10/2026 - 09:05
University of Edinburgh, Scotland, 8th – 10th September 2026 Henry Sweet Lecture 2026 Prof. Martin Krämer (UiT The Arctic University of Norway) Linguistics Association Lecture 2026 Prof. Dr. Regine Eckardt (Universität Konstanz) Language Tutorial Mapudungun - Ben Molineaux, Aldo Berrios Castillo (University of Edinburgh) LAGBPSC Summer School LAGB Education Committee Session Call for Papers – Standard Abstracts: The Linguistics Association of Great Britain and Northern

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