[徵稿] Constructions With Multiple Wh-words Across Languages
https://linguistlist.org/issues/36/2960/
Workshop at SLE 2026: Constructions With Multiple Wh-words Across Languages
Short Title: SLE 2026
Date: 26-Aug-2026 - 29-Aug-2026
Location: Osnabrück, Germany
Contact: Valentina Apresyan
Contact Email: Valentina.Yuryevna.Apresyan@dartmouth.edu
Meeting URL: https://blogs.helsinki.fi/wh-words-cle2026/
Linguistic Field(s): Morphology; Pragmatics; Semantics; Syntax; Typology
Submission Deadline: 05-Nov-2025
Together with Piotr Sobotka, Mikhail Kopotev, and Mladen Uhlik, I am pleased
to announce that we are organizing a workshop at the next meeting of the
Societas Linguistica Europaea (SLE), which will take place in Osnabrück,
Germany, from 26 to 29 August 2026. If you are working on any aspect of
multiple-wh words, we warmly invite you to join us and submit an abstract by 5
November 2025. You will find the workshop description below, and the full
proposal along with further details here:
https://blogs.helsinki.fi/wh-words-cle2026/
Convenors:
Valentina Apresjan (Dartmouth College, USA)
Mikhail Kopotev (University of Helsinki, Finland / Stockholm University,
Sweden)
Piotr Sobotka (Institute of Slavic Studies, PAS, Poland)
Mladen Uhlik (Fran Ramov Institute of the Slovenian Language & University of
Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Meeting Description:
The workshop aims to bring together researchers interested in the syntax,
semantics, and pragmatics of constructions with multiple wh-words across
languages, which are understood as constructions structured with two or more
wh-elements that can fulfil different functions. We propose the following
questions for discussion:
- What semantic, syntactic, and pragmatic factors underlie the restrictions on
wh-variables and their possible pairings in polypronominal wh-constructions,
especially in their distributive readings?
- Under what semantic and pragmatic conditions are such constructions licensed
in discourse, and what communicative functions do they perform across
languages?
- What syntactic positions can these constructions occupy within the clause,
and how do they interact with the valency requirements of the predicate (if
present)?
- How do frequency, idiomatization and formulaicity influence the grammatical
status of these constructions across different languages?
- What are the historical sources of such constructions (e.g. indirect
questions > quasi-relatives > distributives), and what grammaticalization
paths can be identified cross-linguistically?
- Can we detect areal or genealogical patterns in the distribution and
structure of these constructions, and what do such patterns reveal about
contact-induced change versus independent development?
- How do distributive constructions with multiple wh-words compare with other
distributive strategies (lexical, morphological, or clausal) cross-
linguistically?
We welcome submissions that employ a range of theoretical frameworks,
including but not limited to Construction Grammar, formal semantic and
pragmatic analyses, corpus-based studies, cross-linguistic typological
comparisons. We are particularly interested in studies that combine
theoretical analysis with empirical data from diverse languages, using
methodologies such as corpus linguistics, experimental pragmatics and
comparative linguistics.
For full information about the call please visit the workshop site at
https://blogs.helsinki.fi/wh-words-cle2026/
Contact mail: ktokudachego@gmail.com
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