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Syntax and Morphology

leafless tree

Syntax is the study of sentence structure, its relationship to meaning, and theoretical models that account for the ability of speakers to generate an infinite number of novel utterances. Morphology is the study of word structure and its relationship both to sentence structure and to meaning.

 

 

 

Personnel

Predictive processing, syntactic processing, morphological processing, South Asian languages, case and agreement, filler-gap dependencies

Linguistic Typology
Morphology
Linguistic Complexity
Navajo and less-documented languages

Incremental sentence comprehension, case and agreement, singular they, cataphora, person–case constraints, relative clauses, languages of the Caucasus

Syntax, Second language acquisition, Romance languages

Slavic prosody and the phonology/morphology interface; historical Slavic linguistics and accentology; and sociolinguistics, with a focus on questions of language and identity and language contact in the former Yugoslavia.

Syntax, Language acquisition, Germanic languages

Historical Indo-European linguistics, Syntax

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This past summer, Linguistics faculty and students represented UGA at several conferences. We are excited about all of the phenomenal research taking place in the department, and we would like to take the opportunity to recognize some of the projects that…

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