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LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 Glendon’s Linguistics and Language Studies program is committed to the pursuit of excellence in teaching and research within a bilingual small-size university with a strong sense of community. LINGUISTICS AND LANGUAGE STUDIES PROGRAM LINGUISTIQUE ET SCIENCES DU LANGAGE Program Office: 242A York Hall Coordinator: Prof. B. Connell Telephone: 763-2100 x88168 Office : YH C221 E-mail: CoordLIN@glendon.yorku.ca Secretary: Lydia Dosu Telephone: 736 2100 x88222 Fax: 416 440 9570 E-mail: lin@glendon.yorku.ca 1
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 TABLE OF CONTENTS 01 CONTACT US 03 ABOUT OUR PROGRAM 07 OUR PROFESSORS & INSTRUCTORS 15 WHY STUDY LINGUISTICS AND WHAT YOU CAN DO WITH A LINGUISTICS DEGREE 18 CATEGORIES AND COURSE LISTINGS 26 COURSE DESCRIPTIONS 64 INDIVIDUAL STUDIES/HONOURSTHESIS GUIDELINES 66 CERTIFICATE, SPECIALIZED HONOURS STREAM AND IBA 67 LINGUISTICS STUDENT CLUB 68 ACADEMIC SERVICES & RESOURCES 2
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 ABOUT OUR PROGRAM OUR MISSION Linguistics is the study of language in general. It is divided into several sub- disciplines, each of which addresses a particular aspect of language. PHONETICS is the study of the sound properties of language; PHONOLOGY studies how sounds pattern to create meaning in specific languages. MORPHOLOGY explores patterning at the word level, while SYNTAX does so at the level of the sentence. SEMANTICS is the study of meaning in general, while PRAGMATICS is the study of speaker meaning in specific contexts of communication. SOCIOLINGUISTICS deals with the relationships between language-in-use and social contexts, whether in face-to-face situations or at the macro, societal level. HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS explores the evolution of languages over time, while TYPOLOGY compares and categorizes languages. PSYCHOLINGUISTICS deals with topics like the acquisition of language by children and the acquisition and learning of second languages. Finally, to study bilingualism is to explore how individuals function in two languages and to examine contact situations involving two or more languages, such as at Glendon College itself. The Glendon Linguistics and Language Studies program is a bilingual (French- English or Spanish-English) program in its domestic BA format and both bi-and trilingual in its International BA format. All students must begin with a course from Category I (Foundation courses), after which they will choose, according to their degree type, credits from each of Categories II, III, IV and V, as well as credits from the group of Categories VI to VIII. The Specialized Honours BA Stream in Language Endangerment, Documentation and Revitalization has stream-specific requirements. La linguistique est l'étude scientifique du langage humain. Elle est divisée en plusieurs domaines correspondant chacun à un aspect particulier du language. La PHONÉTIQUE étudie les propriétés physiques des sons du langage, alors que la PHONOLOGIE étudie comment ces sons se combinent dans les différentes langues pour construire des unités dotées de sens. La MORPHOLOGIE explore la forme des mots d’une langue, tandis que la SYNTAXE s’intéresse aux combinaisons de mots qui aboutissent à la construction des phrases. La SÉMANTIQUE est l'étude du sens en général ; la PRAGMATIQUE est celle, plus particulière, du sens que les énoncés 3
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 ont en situation de communication. La LINGUISTIQUE HISTORIQUE explore l'évolution des langues au cours du temps ; la TYPOLOGIE compare les langues entre elles et les classifie. La SOCIOLINGUISTIQUE s’intéresse aux relations entre langage et société, telles qu’elles se manifestent dans les échanges conversationnels ou dans des contextes sociaux plus larges. La PSYCHOLINGUISTIQUE étudie, entre autres, la façon dont on acquiert sa langue maternelle ou dont on apprend une langue seconde ou étrangère. Quant à l’étude du BILINGUISME, elle concerne les locuteurs parlant deux ou plusieurs langues ainsi que les diverses situations de contact entre les langues, telles que celles qu’on rencontre quotidiennement au Collège Glendon. Les diplômes délivrés par le programme de linguistique et sciences du langage de Glendon revêtent un caractère bilingue (français-anglais ou espagnol-anglais), tout comme le programme lui-même. Les étudiants et les étudiantes ont aussi la possibilité de préparer un baccalauréat international bilingue ou trilingue. Il leur faut d’abord suivre un cours appartenant à la catégorie I (cours de base), après quoi ils ont le choix, selon le type de diplôme qu’ils visent, entre des cours appartenant à chacune des catégories II, III, IV, et V ainsi qu’entre des cours relevant des catégories VI à VIII. Le baccalauréat spécialisé approfondi portant la mention « Langues en danger, documentation et revitalisation » comporte des exigences particulières. La lingüística es la ciencia que estudia el lenguaje humano. Se divide en varias subdisciplinas, cada una de las cuales se concentra en un aspecto particular del lenguaje. La FONÉTICA estudia las propiedades físicas de los sonidos de la lengua, mientras que la FONOLOGÍA estudia cómo estos sonidos se combinan en varias lenguas para crear enunciados que tengan sentido. La MORFOLOGÍA explora la forma de las palabras de una lengua, mientras la SINTAXIS se interesa en las combinaciones de las palabras que conducen a la construcción de las oraciones. La SEMÁNTICA es el estudio del significado en general, mientras la PRAGMÁTICA es el estudio del significado de los enunciados en una situación de comunicación. La LINGÜÍSTICA HISTÓRICA explora la evolución del lenguaje a través del tiempo, mientras la TIPOLOGÍA compara las lenguas entre ellas y las clasifica. La SOCIOLINGÜÍSTICA se encarga de las relaciones entre la lengua y la sociedad que se manifiestan en los intercambios conversacionales o en los contextos sociales más amplios. La PSICOLINGÜÍSTICA explora, entre otras cosas, cómo se adquiere una lengua (primera, segunda o extranjera). El estudio del BILINGÜISMO se refiere a las situaciones en las cuales los locutores hablan dos o más lenguas y a las situaciones de contacto entre las lenguas – las situaciones que los estudiantes enfrentan diariamente en Glendon. El Programa de lingüística y ciencias del lenguaje de Glendon es un programa bilingüe que ofrece cursos en las disciplinas anteriormente mencionadas. Los 4
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 estudiantes deben comenzar con el curso básico después del cual podrán escoger, según el tipo de licenciatura en Lingüística que hagan, créditos de las siete categorías de cursos que constituyen el programa de estudios. La BA especializada en la rama de “lenguas en peligro de desaparición, documentación y revitalización” tiene sus requerimientos específicos. 5
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LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 OUR PROFESSORS & INSTRUCTORS NOS ENSEIGNANTES ET ENSEIGNANTS AVOLONTO, Aimé Bienvenu, est titulaire d’un PhD en linguistique (option syntaxe et morphologie) et d’un Master of Arts en linguistique (option syntaxe) obtenus à l’Université du Québec à Montréal, d’une spécialisation de maîtrise en linguistique appliquée à la didactique du français langue seconde, d’une formation de Master of Arts en études françaises et d’une formation en conception de matériel pédagogique. BENSON, James D., AB (Hamilton Col), MA (Berkeley), PhD (Toronto), Senior Scholar. Jim Benson’s areas of interest are systemic functional linguistics, nineteenth-century British and American literature, literary stylistics, and discourse. Books: The Language People Really Use; Meaning is Choice; English Dialects; Styles of English; Talking/Writing; Systemic Perspectives on Discourse, vol 1: Selected Theoretical Papers. Systemic Perspectives on Discourse, vol 2: Selected Applied Papers; Systemic Functional Approaches to Discourse (all co-authored or co-edited with William Greaves); Linguistics in a Systemic Perspective (co-edited with William Greaves and Michael Cummings), Functional Dimensions of Ape- Human Discourse (co-edited with William Greaves). Currently working with Sue Savage-Rumbaugh and others at The Great Ape Trust of Iowa, on Bonobo-Human discourse. BESNARD, Christine, est docteure en linguistique (Université Nancy 2). Elle a fondé le Groupe de recherche sur l’apprentissage et l’enseignement du français (GRALEF) qu’elle a dirigé jusqu’en 1995. Elle a publié un certain nombre d’articles et de livres, notamment : Apprivoiser l’écrit - techniques de l’écrit et stratégies d’auto-perfectionnement, Pratique des affaires et correspondance commerciale en français, Les verbes, mots en action : le présent, Les verbes, mots en action : le futur, Les verbes, mots en action : le passé. Elle poursuit ses recherches sur les apports de la psychologie cognitive à l’acquisition des L2, Vygotsky et l’acquisition des L2, et l’acquisition des L2 par les apprenants exceptionnels tels que les autistes de haut niveau (ou Asperger), les dysphasiques, les trisomiques et les dyslexiques. 7
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 BUD, Crina, BSc (North University, Baia Mare), PhD (Babes Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca), Postdoc (Romanian Academy, Bucuresti), Associate Professor. In her three books and more than ninety scholarly studies and cultural articles, she addresses themes, such as language and totalitarianism, the relationship between the literary history and the cultural history, critical perspectives of Romanian literature abroad, translation studies. Her post-doctoral studies at the Romanian Academy structured a history of anthologies of Romanian literature and of Romanian studies in Europe. She contributed to the General Dictionary of Romanian Literature and to the Interdisciplinary Dictionary of Cultural Terminology. BOURDIN, Philippe, est agrégé de l'Université (France) et titulaire d'un Doctorat d'État en linguistique (Université Paris 13). Ses domaines de recherche sont la sémantique grammaticale du français et de l’anglais, la typologie linguistique, et la deixis du temps et de l'espace en perspective typologique. Il prépare actuellement un livre sur les systèmes de deixis directionnelle à travers les langues du monde et les axes de grammaticalisation qu'empruntent les marqueurs concernés (tels que ‘venir’ et ‘aller’ en français). CAMPBELL, Christopher, BA (Dalhousie University/King’s College), MA and PhD (University of Pittsburgh). Areas of interest: philosophy of logic and language, history of analytic philosophy, metaphysics, Wittgenstein. CHACABY, Maya is Anishinaabe (Ojibwe), Beaver Clan from the Thunder Bay Region. Her area of focus is Anishinaabe pedagogies, survivance narratives, and the ethics of reconciliation. Her current work includes community-driven research on exploitation, missing and murdered Indigenous women and Indigenous language as the foundation of cultural continuity. CLIPSHAM, David J., BA (Oxford), Senior Scholar. Medieval language and literature is his area of specialization, but he maintains an interest in the whole field of English Studies. His current work is focused on Chaucer and on the continuity between late medieval and early modern literary culture. CONNELL, Bruce BA (Ottawa), MSc (Alberta), PhD (Edinburgh). Associate Professor, Linguistics and Language Studies Programme. Courses taught include Phonetics, Language Endangerment, Documentary Linguistics, Field Methods, African Languages and Linguistics. His research interests include the phonetics of African languages, especially tone; comparative-historical linguistics and contact 8
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 phenomena, language endangerment in Africa, including its causes and the documentation of endangered languages. His focus is mainly on languages of the Nigeria-Cameroon borderland. His publications include numerous journal articles as well as two edited volumes and a Mòkpè - English dictionary. DAVIDSON, Mary Catherine, BA (UBC), MA and PhD (Toronto), teaches linguistics and language studies courses in medieval and modern English and specializes in the history of the English language. Her book Medievalism, Multilingualism and Chaucer (Palgrave-Macmillan, 2010) analyzes multilingualism and language contact in Chaucer’s England and modern perceptions of medieval English. Her articles on Medieval and Modern English have appeared in Neophilologus, Modern Philology, Studies in Medievalism, Early Modern Literary Studies, and the collection Opening Windows on Texts and Discourses of the Past. She is co-editor of the collection The Languages of Nation (Multilingual Matters, 2012) and her current book project focuses on globalization, multilingualism and anglophone language attitudes in Hollywood film. FRASER, Carol, EdD (OISE/University of Toronto), MA TESL (Université de Montréal), MEd, Reading (McGill University), Senior Scholar. Professor Fraser teaches courses in the ESL, Linguistics, and Masters in Linguistics and Applied Linguistics Programmes. One of her areas of particular interest is the development of advanced reading and writing abilities in ESL. GUTWINSKI, Waldemar, LLM, MA (Warsaw), PhD (Conn.), Professor Emeritus and Senior Scholar. Courses most frequently taught: Introduction to Linguistics, Approaches to English Grammar, Modern English, Discourse Analysis, Literary Stylistics, Advanced English Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic Theory. Major Publications: Cohesion in Literary texts, Mouton (The Hague & Paris, 1976); The Eighth Lacus Forum. 1981 (co-edited with Grace Jolly. Hornbean Press, Columbia, South Carolina). He is also a professional pilot (holder of a Canadian Airline Pilot License) and a flight instructor, teaching flying at Toronto Airways for the past 33 years. KOWAL, Jerzy, PhD (University of Toronto), Associate Professor in the Department of Hispanic Studies and cross-appointed with the Graduate Program in French Studies. His research interests center on Spanish and French languages in Americas, Romance linguistics, Contrastive Linguistics, and Glottopolitics. He has 9
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 produced several scholarly works and some 30 conference papers in the field of Spanish, French, and Romance linguistics. Among his most important works are “Spanish Consecutio Temporum: Myths and Reality”, a book published by Lincom (Munich, Germany), and “Contraintes sur les suites consonantiques et la structure syllabique du roumain”, a conference paper published by Elsevier Science (New York). In addition to publications and research, Prof. Kowal is also an active member of various scholarly associations. He is currently working on a contrastive study of Buenos Aires Spanish and Montreal French, as well as on Business Spanish courses on line (project supported by York University Academic Innovation Fund). MACAULAY, Marcia, BA, PhD (UBC), Associate Professor of English. Courses taught: Introduction to Linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Discourse Analysis, Pragmatics, Varieties of English, Narrative Theory. Major publications: Processing Varieties in English: An Examination of Oral and Written Speech Across Genres (1990) as well as articles on stylistics, pragmatics and gender and language. She is the co-creator and co-organizer of NAWPRA (North American Workshop on Pragmatics) and the co-editor of Pragmatics and Context (2012). She is also the co-editor (with Raluca Levonian, University of Calabria) of Populist Discourse: International Perspectives (forthcoming, Palgrave Macmillan). MARTIN, Ian,. BA, MA (University of Toronto), Associate Professor of English. Coordinator of York certificate programme in the Discipline of Teaching English as an International Language (Cert D-TEIL). Courses most frequently taught: ESL (all levels), Teaching English as an International Language, Studies in Canadian English, and English as a World Language. Major publications: An Invitation to Explore ESP (RELC Press, Singapore, 1992); Aajjiqatigiingniq. Vols 1-3 (Department of Education, Nunavut, 2000). Research interests: international English, intercultural aspects of language learning, motivation, language teacher development, language ecology, indigenous language revitalization. MORGAN, Brian, BA (York University), MA, PhD (OISE/University of Toronto). Associate Professor. His research interests include language and identity, language teacher education, and critical multiliteracies, particularly in relation to EAP, ESL and EFL issues and settings. He is a co-editor (with Alastair Pennycook and Ryuko Kubota) of the Critical Language and Literacy book series published by Multilingual Matters. His first book, The ESL Classroom (1998), was published by the University of Toronto Press. MOUGEON, Françoise, est docteure en linguistique et sciences du langage (Université Paris 10). Ses domaines de spécialisation sont la linguistique appliquée à l’enseignement du français langue première et langue seconde au Collège Glendon 10
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 depuis 1986. Auteure de Quel français parler, manuel de français parlé, et de Paroles francophones, site pédagogique d'accompagnement, elle coordonne plusieurs projets de recherche en sociolinguistique et en linguistique appliquée, notamment sur la compétence sociolinguistique en français des étudiants de français langue seconde, recherches dont les résultats ont fait l’objet de publications récentes. Elle a dirigé le programme de Maîtrise en études françaises entre 2005 et 2008 et elle a été en 2004-2005, puis de 2008 à 2011, Principale adjointe aux affaires académiques et à la recherche. Elle dirige un projet d’innovation pédagogique intégrant contenu et langue et approche expérientielle dans l’enseignement du français. Elle a été co-rédactrice de la Revue canadienne de linguistique appliquée de 2007 à 2012. MOUGEON, Raymond, PhD (Université McGill), a conduit de nombreuses recherches sociolinguistiques sur le français au Canada et en Europe: a) la variation sociale, spatiale et temporelle du français parlé en Ontario; b) la vitalité ethno- linguistique de la communauté franco-ontarienne, c) la variation des français québécois et européen du 17e au 20e siècle et d) l'apprentissage de la variation du français parlé par les étudiants anglophones des programmes d'immersion française. Parmi ses publications on peut mentionner : Mougeon R. et É. Beniak, Linguistic Consequences of Language Contact and Restriction: The Case of French in Ontario, Canada (Oxford University Press, 1991); Mougeon, R., T. Nadasdi et K. Rehner, The Sociolinguistic Competence of Immersion Students (Multilingual Matters, Bristol, 2010). MOYAL, Georges, J. D., BA (Université McGill), MA et PhD (University of Toronto). Intérêts : philosophie grecque et philosophie moderne (Locke et Descartes en particulier). PEGURET, Muriel, PhD (Dalhousie University). Her current work focuses on creating a new pedagogy for assisting post-immersion students in continuing their French language learning and exploring the link between phraseo-didactics and language awareness. Her scholarly and professional interests include the teaching and learning of French as a second language, the immersion and post-immersion context in Canada, the notion of language competence, the Common European framework of Reference for Languages, the teaching and learning of phraseology and teacher education. REYNOLDS, Kevin, B.A. (Colgate University), M.A., Ph.D. (University of Toronto). Teaching areas have included syntax, semantics, literary stylistics, linguistic theory, variational linguistics, documentary linguistics, Italian linguistics, history of the Italian language, translation, Italian as a second/subsequent 11
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 language, medieval Italian literature, post-modern Italian literature, and Italian cinema. Research interests include historiography of Romance languages and literatures, French influence on early manifestations of Italian vernacular literature, reading Dante through a pan-Romance lens, intra-Romance translation, language variation in the English and Italian ambits, historical linguistics, and language pedagogy. RUSSON, Anne, BSc, MSc (McGill University), MA (York), PhD (Université de Montréal), Professor of Psychology. Professor Russon's research interests centre on comparative studies of cognition (social and ecological), communication, culture, and development in great apes. For 22 years she worked with rehabilitant ex-captive orangutans (in Indonesian Borneo) and published research on their imitation, cognitive abilities, communication, cultures, complex object use, and food processing. More recently, she has been establishing a new wild orangutan field site and a science-for-conservation project on E Bornean orangutan ranging behavior. SCHEFFEL-DUNAND, Dominique. Her fields of research in linguistics are language ecology and language contact; semiotics and rhetoric; discourse and conversation analysis; pragmatics and cross-cultural communication and translation; language acquisition and the understanding of natural and artificial languages. She has been engaged for more than fifteen years in exploring the nature and dynamics of human and non-human communication and the various media and technologies that enhance the understanding of information practice and knowledge building in the academic environment. She believes that this understanding may lead to the recognition of the possibilities afforded by new configurations of perception. She is currently investigating paradigm shifts introduced by digital media in the analyses of large corpora of ancient religious texts, literature and scholarly narratives to identify the criteria used to name these texts “canonical” by multiple readerships. She is currently a LLM candidate at Osgoode Hall Law School (York University). SZMIDT, Yvette, est diplômée de l’Université McGill (BA) et de l’Université de Toronto (MA et PhD). Elle est professeure titulaire au département d'études françaises. Elle enseigne des cours en linguistique et didactique ainsi que sur la littérature de la francophonie maghrébine. Elle a publié plusieurs articles et textes dans ces domaines. Elle a également co-édité deux ouvrages sur les littératures maghrébines du Maroc (La traversée du français dans les signes littéraires marocains, Éditions La Source, Toronto, 1996) et d’Algérie (Algérie : Nouvelles écritures, L’Harmattan, Paris, 2001). Elle est aussi co-auteure du premier ouvrage consacré entièrement à neuf écrivaines marocaines : Parcours féminin dans la 12
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 littérature marocaine d'expression française (Éditions La Source, Toronto, 2000). Elle a consacré un ouvrage majeur à l’œuvre globale de l’écrivaine algérienne Malika Mokeddem : Autour des écrivains maghrébins : Malika Mokeddem (L’Harmattan, Paris, 2003). Son dernier ouvrage, dont elle est co-éditrice, est sorti en mars 2008 chez L’Harmattan. Il porte sur la première écrivaine d’origine maghrébine membre de l’Académie française : Assia Djebar. Yvette Szmidt occupe, depuis 1997, les fonctions de co-rédactrice et directrice de la production de la revue internationale Le Maghreb Littéraire. TAKAM TAGUEMNÉ, Aurélie, est titulaire de deux doctorats (Université de Montréal; Université de Yaoundé 1), d’un diplôme d’études approfondies et d’une Maîtrise (Université de Yaoundé 1) en linguistique. Elle a conçu et développé le premier outil normalisé d’évaluation langagière pour les enfants d’âge préscolaire vivant en milieu multilingue afin de dépister les retards de langage et de prédire leur succès scolaire. Elle s’intéresse à l’acquisition du langage monolingue et bilingue, aux troubles du langage, à l’évaluation langagière en milieu multilingue et aux liens entre le langage et les capacités cognitives. Ses travaux lui ont valu plusieurs distinctions dont l’obtention de deux subventions du CRDI et une bourse du FQRSC. UPADHYAY, Shiv, PhD (Georgetown University). Dr. Upadhyay teaches both credit ESL and Linguistics courses at York University. Prior to teaching at York, he taught ESL and Linguistics at different universities and colleges in the USA. His teaching and research interests are in sociolinguistics, discourse analysis, and ESL composition. His research papers have been published in various peer-reviewed journals. Dr. Upadhyay has served as a temporary ENSL Coordinator at Glendon. URITESCU, Dorin, est titulaire de deux doctorats en linguistique (Université de Timisoara, Roumanie, et Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris III). Ses domaines de spécialisation incluent la phonologie, la morphologie naturelle, la morphophonologie, la linguistique historique, l'histoire de la langue française, la linguistique romane, la variation géolinguistique et sociolinguistique, et la typologie des langues. Il est l’auteur de Synchronie et diachronie (1987, deuxième édition, révisée et augmentée en 2007) et de Formel et naturel dans l’évolution phonologique et morphophonologique : essais de linguistique générale et romane (University of Mississippi, Romance Monographs, 2011). Il est aussi l’auteur du Nouvel Atlas linguistique roumain : Crisana, en collaboration avec I. Stan (Éditions de l’Académie roumaine ; vol. I, 1996, prix de l’Académie roumaine en linguistique ; vol. II, 2003 ; vol. III, 2011 ; pour la version informatisée des deux premiers volumes, voir Sheila Embleton, Dorin Uritescu et Eric Wheeler, Romanian Online Dialect Atlas, 2009. http://pi.library.yorku.ca/dspace/. Community : “dialectology”, collection : “RODA”). Co-auteur du Traité de dialectologie roumaine, il a publié de nombreux articles de linguistique, fait partie du comité international de plusieurs revues de linguistique et collabore à deux ouvrages d’envergure internationale : Atlas linguarum Europae et Atlas linguistique roman. 13
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 Il poursuit ses recherches dans des domaines tels que le changement linguistique, l'histoire du français et des langues romanes, et la variation géolinguistique et sociolinguistique en français et en roumain. YUKSEKER, Hitay, Error! Bookmark not defined. has taught linguistics both in Canada and Turkey. She has mostly taught introduction to linguistics, morphology and phonology. Hitay also taught historical linguistics, second language acquisition and language and society along with Canadian language and Culture. Hitay has an M.A. in applied linguistics, M.Ed in curriculum and is A.B.D in theoretical linguistics. Her main research interests are Turkish morpho-syntax interfacing with semantics and/or discourse, morphology, phonology; second language acquisition; historical linguistics; language planning; co-operative learning, project based learning, second language teaching; bilingualism, political economy of bilingualism. 14
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 WHY STUDY LINGUISTICS AND WHAT YOU CAN DO WITH A LINGUISTICS DEGREE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES What are your career opportunities with a BA in linguistics? In a period when Canada is coming to terms with the need to relate to the worldwide mosaic of languages and cultures, and when information and communication issues are moving to centre stage in multilingual Toronto, bilingual Canada and the world at large, there is a growing demand for people equipped to analyze language. An increasing number of employers, ranging from school boards needing speech therapists, speech pathologists and audiologists; language schools needing teachers, curriculum developers and programme managers; agencies needing translators and interpreters; and others needing literacy workers, copy editors, lexicographers, designers of natural-language interfaces for computers, people to work with language revitalization in indigenous communities - these employers and more are recognizing that a sound background in linguistics is essential. Employers seek individuals capable of expressing themselves clearly, solving novel problems and understanding the links between language, society and culture. These skills and perspectives are central to the study of linguistics, and are portable anywhere in the world. Indeed, many Glendon graduates have the opportunity to travel after graduation, and a BA in linguistics (possibly coupled with the Certificate in the Discipline of Teaching English as an International Language) is a passport to teaching and living overseas, whether or not this becomes a long-term career. With this head start, you will have the knowledge and skills to explore language situations of the world as a teacher of EIL, and, depending on your full range of language skills (and the LIN Programme strongly supports and encourages trilingualism) you could become a teacher of French or Spanish as well. Some Glendon LIN grads teach overseas for two years and decide to return to York to do the Masters degree in Theoretical and Applied Linguistics (MATAL). Some others, who also specialize in French, decide to do a Master’s degree in French Studies at York, choosing the linguistics component. Both of these degrees could lead to a career in linguistics, applied linguistics, language teaching or language school administration, whether in Canada or abroad. 15
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 In short, the skills and knowledge you will acquire in the course of studying for your BA in linguistics will be a major asset in any career where a sophisticated knowledge of language and communication is required. COMBINING LINGUISTICS WITH OTHER COLLEGE DISCIPLINES It is very important to mention that linguistics links well with all of Glendon's programs, through a Combined Honours program or the Double Major program, and there will be surprising overlaps between fields to explore. Obviously, linguistics and French, linguistics and Spanish, and linguistics and English are natural combinations. They will suit students eager to deepen their knowledge of a specific language and its literary tradition while gaining a broad overview of language analysis in general. These may be combined further with a Certificate Program, for instance: linguistics and English, with the Cert D-TEIL, or linguistics and French, with the Certificate Program in Technical Writing, or linguistics and Hispanic studies, with the Certificate Program in Spanish-English Translation. A very natural combination would be linguistics and translation studies, bringing together a broad overview of language study with the exciting language-industry exigencies and knowledges-in-contact breadth of translation studies. Please consult the office of the Translation Studies Program for more information about this option. Combining linguistics and history, linguistics and political science, linguistics and international studies, or linguistics and economics will provide students with opportunities to complement linguistics with the study of an important social science field. Linguistics and philosophy, linguistics and computer science, linguistics and information technology, linguistics and mathematics involve the sharing of certain approaches to knowledge construction and are extremely enriching disciplinary combinations. Linguistics and sociology is a natural disciplinary blend, since both fields draw upon each other for conceptual depth. Linguistics and women's studies, linguistics and Canadian studies, linguistics and drama studies are combinations which will be mutually enriching, since each of these fields requires and promotes a sophisticated understanding of language-in-use and practices of knowledge construction. So, in addition to the Specialized Honours program, the Glendon Linguistics Program offers a wide range of flexible options, allowing interested students to consider the advantages of linking linguistics with another discipline in a Double Major or Combined Honours program. 16
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LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 CATEGORIES AND COURSE LISTINGS Courses marked with an asterisk (*) will be offered in 2018-2019. CAT I *GL/EN/LIN 1601 6.00 (EN) The Structure of English *GL/EN/LIN 1603 6.00 (EN) Introduction to Linguistics *GL/FRAN/LIN 2600 6.00 (FR) Introduction à la linguistique générale et française GL/SP/LIN 3600 6.00 (SP) Spanish linguistics CAT II *GL/EN/LIN 2611 3.00 (EN) (F) Phonetics *GL/EN/LIN 2613 3.00 (EN) (W) Phonology *GL/FRAN/LIN 3621 3.00 (FR) (A) Phonétique / Phonologie du français Moderne *GL/EN/LIN 4609 3.00 (EN) (W) Advanced Phonetics and Phonology GL/FRAN/LIN 4660 3.00 (FR) L’analyse phonologique : du concret à l’abstrait et du naturel au formel CAT III GL/LIN 3206 3.00 (EN) Morphology *GL/EN/LIN 3608 6.00 (EN) Modern English GL/EN/LIN 3610 3.00 (EN) Advanced English Syntax 18
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 GL/FRAN/LIN 3618 3.00 (FR) Introduction à la typologie des langues appliquée au français *GL/FRAN/LIN 3652 3.00 (FR) (A) Syntaxe (domaine du français) GL/FRAN/LIN 3653 3.00 (FR) Morphologie (domaine du français) GL/SP/LIN 4603.00 (SP) Contrasting Spanish with English GL/SP/LIN 4604 3.00 (SP) Contrasting Spanish with French *GL/EN/LIN 4605 3.00 (EN) (W) Linguistic Theory GL/EN/LIN 4607 6.00 (EN) Functional Linguistics *GL/FRAN/LIN 4665 3.00 (FR) (A) Théories morphosyntaxiques et langue française *GL/FRAN/LIN 4670 3.00 (FR) (H) Questions de morphosyntaxe et de sémantique en perspective typologique CAT IV *GL/MODR/LIN 1716 6.00 (FR) Logique formelle et informelle *GL/MODR/LIN 2640 6.00 (EN) Logic *GL/PHIL/MODR/LIN 2690 3.00 (FR) (H) Logique symbolique *GL/EN/LIN 3609 3.00 (EN) (F) Pragmatics GL/EN/LIN 3611 3.00 (EN) Semantics GL/FRAN/LIN 3614 3.00 (FR) Grammaire raisonnée du français: approche énonciative GL/FRAN/LIN 3622 3.00 (FR) Sémantique *GL/PHIL/MODR/LIN 3910 3.00 (EN) (F) Philosophy of Language GL/PHIL/LIN 3915 3.00 (EN) The Analytic Tradition GL/EN/LIN 4613 3.00 (EN) Children’s Discourse 19
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 GL/PHIL/LIN 4615 3.00 (EN) Introduction to Wittgenstein GL/PHIL/ LIN 4618 3.00 (EN) Logic and its Philosophy GL/FRAN/LIN 4622 3.00 (FR) Phraséologie (domaine du français) *GL/PHIL/LIN 4647 3.00 (EN) (W) Topics in the Philosophy of Language: Truth GL/FRAN/LIN 4658 3.00 (FR) Lexicologie / Lexicographie CAT V *GL/HUMA/LIN 1622 6.00 (EN) Introductory Latin GL/HUMA/LIN 2922 6.00 (EN) Intermediate Latin *GL/EN/LIN 3605 6.00 (EN) Old English GL/FRAN/LIN 3615 3.00 (FR) Linguistique historique : reconstruction et changement linguistique GL/FRAN/LIN 3618 3.00 (FR) Introduction à la typologie des langues appliquée au français GL/SP/LIN 4600 3.00 (SP) History of the Spanish Language GL/SP/LIN 4601 3.00 (SP) History of the Spanish Language in America GL/EN/LIN 4606 6.00 (EN) History of the English Language GL/FRAN/LIN 4651 6.00 (FR) Histoire de la langue française *GL/FRAN/LIN 4659 3.00 (FR) (W) Structure et changement dans l’évolution du français *GL/FRAN/LIN 4670 3.00 (FR) (W) Questions de morphosyntaxe et de sémantique en perspective typologique 20
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 CAT VI GL/EN/LIN 3607 6.00 (EN) Literary Stylistics *GL/EN/LIN 3609 3.00 (EN) (F) Pragmatics *GL/FRAN/LIN 3642 3.00 (FR) (H) Introduction aux linguistiques du discours et de l’énonciation GL/LIN 4210 3.00 (EN) Gender and Discourse GL/LIN 4212 3.00 (EN) Applied Discourse Analysis GL/EN/LIN 4608 3.00 (EN) Discourse Analysis GL/EN/LIN 4612 3.00 (EN) Studies in Discourse Analysis: Narrative Theory GL/LIN/EN 4613 3.00 (EN) Children’s Discourse GL/EN/LIN 4628 3.00 (EN) Critical Discourse Analysis GL/FRAN/LIN 4654 3.00 (FR) Linguistique et critique littéraire (domaine du français) CAT VII *GL/EN/LIN 1903 3.00 (W) English in the World; the World in English GL/LIN 2001 6.00 (EN) A Linguistic Introduction to Persian *GL/LIN 2505 6.00 (EN) Romanian Language: A linguistic introduction GL/LIN 2507 3/6.00 (EN) Brazilian Portuguese Language : A linguistic introduction GL/LIN 2515 6.00 (EN) Italian : A linguistic introduction GL/LIN 2602 6.00 (EN) Persian Culture: A Semiotic Perspective 21
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 *GL/LIN 2622 6.00 (EN) Romanian Culture in a semiotic perspective GL/EN/LIN/SOCI/SOSC 2634 3.00(EN) Language and Society *GL/CNDS/HUMA/SOSC 2636 3.00 (EN) (F) (Anishinaabemowin) Language and Culture I *GL/CNDS/HUMA/SOSC 2638 3.00 (EN) (W) (Anishinaabemowin) Language and Culture II GL/LIN 3300 3.00/6.00 (FR) Introduction à la linguistique romane *GL/FRAN/LIN 3602 3.00 (FR) (A) Introduction à la linguistique appliquée GL/EN/LIN 3604 3.00 (EN) Varieties of English GL/FRAN/LIN 3612 3.00 (FR) Contact des langues et interférences GL/LIN/CNDS/SOSC 3616 3.00 (EN) Case Studies in Canada’s aboriginal Languages *GL/LIN/SOSC 3619 3.00 (EN) (F) Language Endangerment GL/LIN/SOSC 3627 3.00 (EN) African Languages and Linguistics *GL/EN/SOCI/LIN 3650 6.00 (EN) Sociolinguistics GL/EN/FRAN/LIN 3655 6.00 (EN/FR) Language Use in a Bilingual Context/ Usage linguistique en contexte bilingue *GL/FRAN/LIN 3900 3.00 (FR) (A) Introduction à la sociolinguistique *GL/LIN 4215 3.00 (EN) (W) Field Methods GL/LIN 4217 3.00 (EN) Documentary Linguistics GL/SP/LIN 4602 3.00 (EN) Contemporary Spanish in Latin America GL/EN/LIN 4610 3.00 (EN) Studies in Canadian English *GL/EN/LIN 4617 3.00 (EN) (F) Language Policy and Language Planning 22
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 GL/FRAN/LIN 4657 3.00 (FR) La sociolinguistique et les réalités de la francophonie GL/FRAN/LIN 4661 3.00 (FR) Variation stylistique et apprentissage du FLS *GL/SP/LIN 4694 3.00 (EN) (W) Spanish as a Global Language GL/EN/LIN 4695 3.00 (EN) English as a World Language CAT VIII *GL/FRAN/LIN 3602 3.00 (FR) (A) Introduction à la linguistique appliquée GL/EN/LIN 3606 3.00 (EN) Learning English as a Second Language GL/PSYC/NATS/LIN 3640 3.00 (EN) Psychological Studies of Language GL/PSYC/NATS/LIN 3640 3.00 (FR) La Psycholinguistique GL/FRAN/LIN 3656 3.00 Introduction aux théories psycholinguistiques appliquées à l'apprentissage des L2 *GL/SP/LIN 3660 3.00 (EN) (F) Teaching Spanish as a Foreign Language GL/FRAN/LIN 4661 3.00 Variation stylistique et apprentissage du français langue seconde GL/FRAN/LIN 4662 3.00 Linguistique appliquée à l'apprentissage et l'enseignement du français langue seconde GL/FRAN/LIN 4663 3.00 L'apprentissage du français L2 : affectivité et cognition GL/EN/LIN 4696 6.00 (EN) Teaching English as an International Language 23
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 Course timetable is subject to change. Please check the online lecture schedule published on the York courses website. https://w2prod.sis.yorku.ca/Apps/WebObjects/cdm ______________________ L’horaire des cours sont sujet à modification. Veuillez vérifier l'horaire des cours en ligne. https://w2prod.sis.yorku.ca/Apps/WebObjects/cdm 24
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 LIST OF COURSE CREDIT EXCLUSIONS BETWEEN GLENDON (LIN) AND LA&PS (LING) A student may not count both courses towards a degree. GLENDON KEELE CAT I GL/EN/LIN 1601 6.00 Structure of English AP/LING 2060 6.00 GL/EN/LIN 1603 6.00 Introduction to Linguistics AP/LING 1000 6.00 CAT II GL/EN/LIN 2611 3.00 Phonetics AP/LING 2110 3.00 GL/EN/LIN 2613 3.00 Phonology AP/LING 2120 3.00 CAT IV GL/EN/LIN 3611 3.00 Semantics AP/LING 3150 3.00 CAT V GL/EN/LIN 4606 6.00 History of the English AP/LING 3060 3.00 Language CAT VI GL/EN/LIN 4608 3.00 Discourse Analysis AP/LING 3160 3.00 CAT VII GL/EN/LIN 2634 3.00 Language and Society AP/LING 2400 3.00 CAT VIII GL/LIN 3640 3.00 Psychological Studies of AP/LING 3220 3.00 Language (EN/FR) GL/LIN 3606 3.00 Learning English as a Second AP/LING 3240 3.00 Language 25
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 Please note that the LING courses offered at DLLL (LA&PS) have their own prerequisites, which must be satisfied before you will be accepted into their courses. You must check with the LING program at DLLL to ensure your acceptance. Also, you will need to check with the Glendon LIN Coordinator to ascertain which of Glendon’s LIN categories each specific LING course will satisfy. 26
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 COURSE DESCRIPTIONS CATEGORY I: FOUNDATION COURSES/COURS DE BASE/CURSOS DE INTRODUCCION *GL/EN/LIN 1601 6.00 (EN) The Structure of English *GL/EN/LIN 1603 6.00 (EN) Introduction to Linguistics *GL/FRAN/LIN 2600 6.00 (FR) Introduction à la linguistique générale et française GL/SP/LIN 3600 6.00 (SP) Spanish Linguistics GL/EN/LIN 1601 6.00 (EN) THE STRUCTURE OF ENGLISH Section A Instructor: Shiv Upadhyay Section B Instructor : Tom Wilson This course offers practical linguistic tools for describing contemporary English, both spoken and written, including its sound system, vocabulary, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, style, and usage. Some attention is given to analyzing both literary texts and learner language. Note: D-TEIL Certificate students should verify the Lecture Schedule for Course Section Enrolment, since Section A is strongly recommended for D-TEIL Certificate students. This course considers English grammar from a broad perspective, and involves examination of not only the sentence structure of the language, but also its sound system, how it has changed over time, the range of its variation, both social and geographical, and its current role as a major language in the world. Course credit exclusions: GL/EN 2520 3.00, GL/EN 2540 3.00, AP/LING 2060 6.00 and GL/EN 2608 6.00. 27
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 GL/EN/LIN 1603 6.00 (EN) INTRODUCTION TO LINGUISTICS Section A: Marcia Macaulay Section B: Fall: Kevin Reynolds Winter: Hitay Yukseker This course introduces the theory and technique of linguistics with illustrations mainly from English. Core areas of study will include phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax and semantics. Other areas include pragmatics, discourse analysis and historical linguistics. Linguistics is the systematic study of human language. Some say linguistics is the most humanistic of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities. It appeals to students of computer science no less than to students of modern languages or language majors. This course will investigate how language has internal patternings, how verbal communication is organized on several different levels (phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics), and how these levels interact. The role of pragmatics in sentence interpretation, how language changes over time and how it is used in social contexts will also be discussed. The course fulfils the language requirement for English majors and constitutes an integral part of the Linguistics program. Course credit exclusions: GL/EN 2570 6.00, GL/EN 2570 3.00 and AP/LING 1000 6.00, GL/EN 1605 6.00 and GL/EN 2605 6.00. GL/FRAN/LIN 2600 6.00 (FR) INTRODUCTION A LA LINGUISTIQUE GENERALE ET FRANÇAISE Section A (été) Enseignant : Aimé Avolonto Section A (année) Enseignant : Aimé Avolonto Section B (année) Enseignante : Yvette Szmidt Section C (année) Enseignant : Philippe Bourdin Section D (année) Enseignant : Aurélie Takam 28
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 On étudiera l’appareil conceptuel de la linguistique structurale, en montrant quel regard elle autorise sur les langues en général et sur le français en particulier. L’examen systématique des niveaux d’analyse (phonologie, morphologie, syntaxe et sémantique) permettra d’aborder les principales théories contemporaines : fonctionnalisme, générativisme, linguistique énonciative. Conditions préalables : Justifier d'un minimum de C en GL/FRLS 1240 3.00 ou GL/FRAN 1835 3.00 (ou GL/FRLS 1530 3.00) ou GL/FRAN 1745 3.00 ou permission du département. Cours incompatibles : AP/FR 2100 6.00, GL/FRAN 3220 3.00, GL/FRAN 2220 6.00. Remarque : Tout étudiant se spécialisant en études françaises devra justifier d'un minimum de C dans le GL/FRAN 2600 6.00 avant de pouvoir s'inscrire dans n'importe quel autre cours de linguistique pour lequel GL/FRAN 2600 6.00 est un préalable. GL/SP/LIN 3600 6.00 (SP) SPANISH LINGUISTICS Not offered in 2018-2019 This course examines the linguistic structures of the Spanish language: its sound system (phonetics and phonology), its word formation (morphology), its sentence structure (syntax) and varieties of Spanish (historical, social and regional). CATEGORY II: PHONETICS/PHONOLOGY ; PHONETIQUE ET PHONOLOGIE ; FONETICA Y FONOLOGIA *GL/EN/LIN 2611 3.00 (EN) (F) Phonetics *GL/EN/LIN 2613 3.00 (EN) (W) Phonology *GL/FRAN/LIN 3621 3.00 (FR) (A) Phonétique/Phonologie du français moderne *GL/EN/LIN 4609 3.00 (EN) (W) Advanced Phonetics and Phonology GL/FRAN/LIN 4660 3.00 (FR) L’analyse phonologique : du concret à l’abstrait et du naturel au formel GL/EN/LIN 2611 3.00 (EN) PHONETICS Fall Instructor: Bruce Connell This course offers an introduction to various aspects of phonetics (articulatory and acoustic) with practice in discrimination and transcription of speech sounds, with particular attention to, but not limited to, English. 29
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 Phonetics is described broadly as the scientific study of the characteristics of human sound production abilities. More narrowly, it focuses especially on those sounds actually used in speech, and provides methods and analytical techniques for their description, classification and transcription. Phonetics is traditionally divided into three branches, articulatory phonetics, acoustic and auditory phonetics. This course focuses on the first of these three. The course begins with a brief overview of the sounds of English, and how they are produced and transcribed. This provides a basis for the study of general phonetics, which examines the range of sounds used in the world’s languages. The course concludes with a look at the relationship between phonetics and other branches of language study, such as phonology and historical linguistics.Throughout the course emphasis is placed on use of the International Phonetic Alphabet. Extensive use of facilities in the multimedia lab allows students to work at their own pace in learning to distinguish and produce the range of sounds used in the world’s languages, as well as visualize other aspects of phonetics. Prerequisites: GL/EN 1603 6.00 (formerly GL/EN 2605 6.00 and GL/EN 1605 6.00) or GL/EN 1601 6.00 or an equivalent introductory linguistics course or permission of the department. Course credit exclusion: GL/FRAN 3621 3.00, GL/LIN 3621 3.00 and AP/LING 2110 3.00 and GL/EN 3603 3.00. GL/EN/LIN 2613 3.00 (EN) PHONOLOGY Winter Instructor: Tom Wilson This course studies theoretical principles and practical techniques of phonological analysis of data taken principally, but not exclusively, from English. Prerequisite: GL/EN 2611 3.00 or equivalent. Course credit exclusion: AP/LING 2120 3.00 and GL/EN 3601 3.00. GL/FRAN/LIN 3621 3.00 (FR) PHONETIQUE/PHONOLOGIE DU FRANÇAIS MODERNE Automne Enseignante : Aurélie Takam Phonétique articulatoire; classification des consonnes et des voyelles. Établissement de la distinction entre phonétique et phonologie, notion de phonème, traits distinctifs. Phonétique combinatoire (syllabe, assimilation, liaison) et suprasegmentale (accent, intonation). 30
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 Description phonologique des français contemporains; étude détaillée du français canadien. Condition préalable : Cours d'introduction à la linguistique ou GL/FRAN 2600 6.00 ou GL/LIN 2600 6.00 ou GL/EN 2605 6.00 ou GL/LIN 2605 6.00 (EN). Remarque : une note minimale de C en GL/FRAN 2600 6.00 (ou équivalent) est requise pour tout étudiant se spécialisant en études françaises. Cours incompatibles : AP/FR 3140 6.00, GL/FRAN 3270 3.00, GL/LIN 3603 3.00. GL/EN/LIN 4609 3.00 (EN) ADVANCED PHONETICS AND PHONOLOGY Winter Instructor: Bruce Connell Building on GL/EN 2611 (formerly 3603) 3.00, this course will introduce detailed work in acoustic phonetics using our micro speech lab for computer speech analysis and display. We will then use the acquired techniques to study intonational meaning in spoken Canadian English texts. This course will introduce detailed work in acoustic phonetics with particular emphasis on the role of intonation in MOOD, and other systems in English Integrated with: GS/EN 6880 3.00. Prerequisite: GL/EN 2611 3.00 (formerly GL/EN 3603 3.00) or equivalent or permission of the Department. Course credit exclusion: GL/EN 4530 3.00. GL/FRAN/LIN 4660 3.00 (FR) L’ANALYSE PHONOLOGIQUE DU CONCRET A L’ABSTRAIT ET DU NATUREL AU FORMEL Ce cours n’est pas offert en 2018-2019 Le cours se propose de donner aux étudiants la formation nécessaire pour comprendre et analyser de façon critique les études basées sur quelques-unes des théories phonologiques actuelles. Les étudiants seront aussi capables d’aborder des aspects du français et d’autres langues dans certaines approches phonologiques contemporaines. Condition préalable : Cours d'introduction à la linguistique. Remarque : une note minimale de C en GL/FRAN 2600 6.00 (ou équivalent) est requise pour tout étudiant se spécialisant en études françaises. 31
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 Cours incompatible : GL/FRAN 4340 3.00. CATEGORY III: MORPHOLOGY/SYNTAX; MORPHOLOGIE ET SYNTAXE; MORFOLOGIA Y SINTAXIS GL/LIN 3206 3.00 (EN) Morphology *GL/EN/LIN 3608 6.00 (EN) Modern English GL/EN/LIN 3610 3.00 (EN) Advanced English Syntax GL/FRAN/LIN 3618 3.00 (FR) Introduction à la typologie des langues appliquée au français *GL/FRAN/LIN 3652 3.00 (FR) (A) Syntaxe (domaine du français) GL/FRAN/LIN 3653 3.00 (FR) Morphologie (domaine du français) GL/SP/LIN 4603 3.00 (SP) Contrasting Spanish with English GL/SP/LIN 4604 3.00 (SP) Contrasting Spanish with French *GL/EN/LIN 4605 3.00 (EN) (W) Linguistic Theory GL/EN/LIN 4607 6.00 (EN) Functional Linguistics *GL/FRAN/LIN 4665 3.00 (FR) (A) Théories morphosyntaxiques et langue française *GL/FRAN/LIN 4670 3.00 (FR) (H) Questions de morphosyntaxe et de sémantique en perspective typologique GL/LIN 3206 3.00 (EN) MORPHOLOGY Not offered in 2018-2019 Morphology is the study of word structure and the nature of morphemes which are the constituents of words. In this course we will investigate the typology of morphemes; the structural and semantic composition of words. Prerequisite: An introductory course in Linguistics. Course credit exclusion: AP/LING 3120 3.00. GL/EN/LIN 3608 6.00 (EN) MODERN ENGLISH Winter Instructor: Kevin Reynolds A study of the phonology, grammar and lexis of present-day English using major treatments of English grammar from scholarly traditional to transformational- generative. 32
LINGUISTICS/ LINGUISTIQUE 2018-2019 The course will concentrate on the study of the grammar and vocabulary of present- day English in a seminar setting. Various topics in the area of syntax and lexis will be studied by examining their treatment in several grammars and linguistic texts. Semantic aspects of syntactic structures and lexis will be given considerable attention. Prerequisites: GL/EN 1603 6.00 (formerly GL/EN 2605 6.00 and GL/EN 1605 6.00), (GL/EN 1601 6.00 (formerly GL/EN 2608 6.00) or an equivalent introductory linguistics course or permission of the instructor. Course credit exclusion: GL/EN 3540 6.00. GL/EN/LIN 3610 3.00 (EN) ADVANCED ENGLISH SYNTAX Not offered in 2018-2019 This course offers an advanced study of English syntax using approaches to investigation and description provided by such theoretical models as transformational-generative, systemic and stratificational. Prerequisites: GL/EN 1601 6.00 or GL/EN 1603 3.00 or an equivalent introductory linguistics course or permission of the instructor. Course credit exclusion: GL/EN 3570 3.00. GL/FRAN/LIN 3618 3.00 (FR) INTRODUCTION A LA TYPOLOGIE DES LANGUES APPLIQUEE AU FRANÇAIS Ce cours n’est pas offert en 2018-2019 Ce cours vise tout à la fois à initier les étudiants aux concepts clés de la typologie des langues et à réexaminer avec eux, dans le cadre conceptuel ainsi établi, quelques grandes questions de grammaire du français. Condition préalable : GL/FRAN 2600 6.00. Cours incompatible : GL/FRAN 4655 6.00. Remarque : une note minimale de C en GL/FRAN 2600 6.00 (ou équivalent) est requise pour tout étudiant se spécialisant en études françaises. GL/FRAN/LIN 3652 3.00 (FR) SYNTAXE (DOMAINE DU FRANÇAIS) Automne Enseignant : Philippe Bourdin 33
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