Presentations

 

Colloquia

de Lacy, Paul (2007). Glossolalia as a targetless L2: Initial results. Linguistics department, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

de Lacy, Paul (2006). Competence markedness vs. other markednesses. Department of Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University.

de Lacy, Paul (2006). Principles of C-Markedness. Linguistics department, University of Pennsylvania.

de Lacy, Paul (2005). Phonological evidence. Linguistics department, City University of New York (CUNY).

de Lacy, Paul (2005). Markedness exists. Linguistics department, State University of New York, Stony Brook.

de Lacy, Paul (2005). Markedness exists. Linguistics department, University of Delaware.

de Lacy, Paul (2004). The phonology of glossolalia. School of Languages, Linguistics, and Cultures, University of Manchester (UK).

de Lacy, Paul (2004). The interpretive loop. Linguistics department, Stanford University.

de Lacy, Paul (2003). Opacity is parallel. Linguistics department, University of York (UK).

de Lacy, Paul (2003). Formalizing markedness in Optimality Theory. Linguistics department, Newcastle University (UK).

de Lacy, Paul (2003). Markedness hierarchies and conflation. Stanford University.

de Lacy, Paul (2003). The meaning of markedness in Optimality Theory. The Cambridge Linguistic Society, Cambridge (UK).

de Lacy, Paul (2002). A formal theory of ‘exchange rules’: Morpheme distinctiveness in DhoLuo. Phonology Reading Group presentation, University College London (UK).

de Lacy, Paul (2002). A formal theory of markedness symmetries and asymmetries. Department of Linguistics and Phonetics, University College London.

de Lacy, Paul (2001). The feature [sonority] in sonority-driven stress. Haskins Laboratories.

de Lacy, Paul (2000). Architecture at the Interpretive Interface. Concordia University (Montreal, Canada).

de Lacy, Paul (2000). Maximal words. Rutgers Optimality Research Group, Rutgers University.

de Lacy, Paul (2000). Prosodic conditions on Maori allomorphy. University of Auckland, New Zealand.

de Lacy, Paul (2000). The effects of interpretation on form. Phonology Circle presentation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

de Lacy, Paul (1999). Tone and prominence. Rutgers Optimality Research Group, Rutgers University.

 

Conferences

Invited

de Lacy, Paul (2007). Synchronic aspects of diachronic change. Invited talk at the ‘Theoretical insights into diachronic change’ workshop, International Conference on Historical Linguistics (ICHL), Université du Québec à Montréal.

de Lacy, Paul (2003). Fixed ranking and the ‘Too Many Solutions’ problem. Invited talk, CASTL Kick-Off Conference, University of Tromsø, Norway.

de Lacy, Paul (2001). Maximal words and the Māori passive. Keynote talk. Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association Conference 8, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

de Lacy, Paul and Catherine Kitto (1999). A correspondence theory of epenthetic quality. Keynote talk. Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association Conference 8, University of Toronto.

 

Refereed

de Lacy, Paul (2007). The formal properties of phonological precedence. Conference on precedence in phonology. CUNY Phonology Circle. City University of New York.

de Lacy, Paul (2001). Conflation and the formal expression of hierarchies. North-Eastern Linguistics Society Conference 32. City University of New York.

de Lacy, Paul and Caro Struijke (2000). Explaining overkill in dissimilation. North-Eastern Linguistics Society Conference 31. Georgetown University, Washington.

de Lacy, Paul (2000). Markedness in prominent positions. Harvard-MIT Student Conference in Linguistics (HUMIT), Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

de Lacy, Paul (2000). Heads, non-heads, and tone in a theory of prominence. Tromsø Tone Symposium: 5th Annual International Tromsø Workshop in Linguistics, University of Tromsø, Norway.

Bye, Patrik and Paul de Lacy (1999). Edge asymmetries in Phonology and Morphology. North-Eastern Linguistics Society Conference 30.

de Lacy, Paul (1999). Parsing-out circumscription in Optimality Theory. Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association Conference 6. University of Toronto.

de Lacy, Paul (1999). Morpheme order and correspondence. West Coast Conference in Formal Linguistics 18, University of Arizona.

 

Non-referred

de Lacy, Paul (2007). Featural morphemes are coalescing segments. Presentation, Meeting of the Network on Morphological Exponence, University of Leipzig, Germany.

de Lacy, Paul (1999). Haplologizing reduplicants. Rutgers-UMass Joint Class Meeting 4, Rutgers University.

de Lacy, Paul (1998). Positional markedness in Niuafo’ou. Rutgers-UMass Joint Class Meeting 3, University of Massachusetts Amherst.
 

 

 

 
Contact

 

Paul de Lacy

Associate Professor

Linguistics Department

Rutgers University

18 Seminary Place

New Brunswick

NJ 08901-1108


delacy@rutgers.edu

ph. +1-732-9323399

fax. +1-732-9321370

 

office: Room 303

 

 

Downloads/Links

 

C.V.

Publications

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