Talks

CUNY Sociolinguistics talk

Greg Guy & me at Via Brasil. Did you know there’s a Little Brazil in NYC? I sure didn’t! It’s about a block long.

Greg Guy & me at Via Brasil. Did you know there’s a Little Brazil in NYC? I sure didn’t! It’s about a block long.

On October 25th I gave a talk at CUNY’s Sociolinguistics Lunch, about my ongoing work examining dialect change among mobile speakers. It was great to meet and chat with the linguists at CUNY, and to see some old friends from NYU as well! (including my grad school advisor Greg Guy!)

ICPhS talk in Melbourne

Australian coat of arms (at the Melbourne Museum)

Australian coat of arms (at the Melbourne Museum)

Concluding my talk (thanks to Maddie Oakley for the photo!)

Concluding my talk (thanks to Maddie Oakley for the photo!)

A few weeks ago I gave a talk at the International Congress of Phonetic Sciences in Melbourne, Australia. The talk was titled Linguistic and Social Factors Favoring Acquisition of Contrast in a New Dialect; you can download a pdf of the proceedings paper here.

ICLaVE 10 talk in Leeuwarden

special delivery in Leeuwarden

special delivery in Leeuwarden

Title slide (thanks to Sandra Jansen for the photo!)

Title slide (thanks to Sandra Jansen for the photo!)

Just back from an excellent trip to the Netherlands! After jaunts in Amsterdam, Leiden, and the eastern countryside, we headed up to Leeuwarden for ICLaVE 10 where I gave my talk, A difference without a distinction? How speakers split word classes without acquiring new categories. My talk was part of a larger panel on phonemic splits organized by Sandra Jansen and Natalie Braber - thanks to both for inviting me to be a part of it!

Colloquium talk at The University of Iowa

Iowa City businesses lean in to their midwest dialect features

Iowa City businesses lean in to their midwest dialect features

one of the ubiquitous [hɔᵊks] (in my dialect)

one of the ubiquitous [hɔᵊks] (in my dialect)

I’ve just returned from the University of Iowa, where I gave an invited talk (Dialects on the Move: What Accent Change in Mobile Speakers Can Reveal About People, Phonology, and the Lexicon) in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and otherwise had a great time chatting with faculty and students!