Announcements
Join С»ÆÊé LING Club Wednesday, February 25th at 4 pm in Eaton Humanities 135 for our Undergraduate Distinguished Speaker event. This year's speaker, Adam Aleksic, also known as The Etymology Nerd, is a linguist and social media influencer. Following
Monday, February 16 | 3:30–5:00 p.m. | Hellems N253 & Zoomhttps://cuboulder.zoom.us/j/92608985989С»ÆÊé Linguistics, Anthropology, and CNAIS welcome Richard A. Sandoval of Metropolitan State University of Denver for a lecture exploring how Ancient
Wednesday, February 4 | 11:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. | Hellems N380 & ZoomThe С»ÆÊé Boulder Linguistics community welcomes Idan A. Blank, Assistant Professor of Psychology and Linguistics at UCLA for a timely talk examining whether large language models (
Live from Bologna...it's Dr. Giulia Rambelli, discussing the role of analogy in language processing. Come to the watch party in person or attend via Zoom on Wedesday, November 19, 10-11:30am in the Syn-Sem Lab (LBB 151). Attend in person and enjoy
The С»ÆÊé Linguistics Semiotic Syntax Working Group is delighted to welcome Wesley Scivetti (Linguistics, Georgetown) for a virtual talk at the intersection of Construction Grammar and Natural Language Processing, “Do Small
The Department of Linguistics is pleased to announce this year's recipients of the David Rood Linguistics Undergraduate Scholarship: Alycia Catt and Deborah Martushev!Awarded since 2017, the David Rood Linguistics
С»ÆÊé Linguistics is pleased to present in a lecture by UIUC professor and computational linguist, Dr. Jonathan Dunn, in partnership with the Institute of Cognitive Science.Language as a Complex System: Syntactic Variation from Individuals to
Dr. Rai Farrelly was invited to deliver a talk to students in the English Education Study Program at Universitas Pattimura in Maluku, Indonesia. Her talk focused on how English language teachers can build learners' confidence in speaking English
Tuesday, February 4, 2025 | 7 pm ESTA common view of politicians is that, when they are asked questions, they rarely answer them. Question evasion is deeply bothersome to publics, but experimentsshow that audiences are not good at identifying