PRESENTATIONS

Phonological Theory

2011

Contextual influence on acoustic correlates of focus in English, Québec French and European French.

Vander Klok, J., M. Wagner & H. Goad

Experimental and Theoretical Advances in Prosody (ETAP) 2, McGill University, September.

Puzzling input and the role of markedness: The acquisition of Québec French Stress.

Goad, H.

International Workshop on Metrics, Phonology and Acquisition. Université Paris 8, June.

The L2 acquisition of functional morphology: Why syntacticians need phonologists.

Goad, H.

Generative Approaches to Second Language Acquisition (GASLA) 11, University of Washington, March.

2010

Prosodic transfer at different levels of structure: The L2 acquisition of Spanish plurals.

Goad, H., L. White & J. Bruhn de Garavito

Boston University Conference on Language Development (BU) 35, November.

The L2 acquisition of Spanish plurals by French speakers: Constraints on syllable structure or on higher prosodic structure?

Goad, H., L. White & J. Bruhn de Garavito

Generative Approaches to Language Acquisition North America (GALANA) 4, University of Toronto, September.

Prosodic licensing and tone sandhi in contour tone languages.

Qu, C. & H. Goad

GLOW-in-Asia VIII, Center for Linguistic Theory, Beijing Language and Culture University, August.

Stress and tone sandhi in contour tone languages.

Qu, C. & H. Goad

Annual Meeting of the Canadian Linguistic Association (CLA), Concordia University, May.

Structural vs. perceptual constraints on sC clusters: Evidence for a coda analysis of s.

Goad, H.

Generative Linguistics in the Old World Colloquium (GLOW) 33, University of Wrocław, April.

The special status of /s/: Appendix or coda?

Goad, H.

Sixth North American Phonology Conference, Concordia University, April.

On the representation of sC clusters.

Goad, H.

Montréal-Ottawa-Toronto (MOT) Phonology Workshop, Carleton University, March.

Interlanguage articles: Bound or free?

Goad, H. & L. White

West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics (WCCFL) 28, University of Southern California, February.

Syntactic ambiguity resolution: Effects of prosodic breaks and prosodic length.

Hwang, H., M. Lieberman, H. Goad & L. White

West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics (WCCFL) 28, University of Southern California, February.

2009

Prosodic development in a Québec French-English bilingual: Cross-language transfer or undifferentiated systems?

McCurdy, K. & H. Goad

International Symposium on Bilingualism 7 (ISB), Utrecht University, July.

PDF (241 kb)

Markedness in the acquisition of Québec French prosodic structure.

Goad, H. & A.-E. Prévost

Annual Meeting of the Canadian Linguistic Association, Carleton University, May.

2008

Is there a foot in L1 French? The competing roles of markedness and ambient input.

Goad, H. & A.-E. Prévost

Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL) 38, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, April.

2006

Prosodic transfer and determiners in Turkish-English interlanguage.

Goad, H. & L. White

Boston University Conference on Language Development (BU) 31, November.

L2 determiners: Is definiteness really a problem? A prosodic alternative.

Goad, H. & L. White

Generative Approaches to Second Language Acquisition (GASLA) 8, Calgary/Banff, April.

2005

Prosodic transfer: L1 effects on the production of L2 determiners.

Goad, H. & L. White

Boston University Conference on Language Development (BU) 30, November.

Production of L2 determiners: Semantic or phonological effects?

Goad, H. & L. White

Generative Approaches to Language Acquisition (GALA), Siena, Italy, September.

2004

The representation of L2 English tense: Evidence from regular and irregular verbs.

Goad, H. & L. White

Generative Approaches to Language Acquisition-North America (GALANA), University of Hawaii at Manoa, December.

Representational ‘deficits’ in L2: Syntactic or phonological?

Goad, H. & L. White

Boston University Conference on Language Development (BU) 29, November.

Assimilation and reduction phenomena as licensing in early grammars.

Goad, H.

Colloquium Series of the Department of Linguistics, Rutgers University, October.

Consonant harmony in early grammars revisited: Domains, licensing and directionality.

Goad, H.

IVèmes Journées d’Études Linguistiques (JEL 2004), Université de Nantes, France, May.

Missing tense features or missing tense morphology: Testing the Prosodic Transfer Hypothesis.

Goad, H. & L. White

Generative Approaches to Second Language Acquisition (GASLA) 7, Indiana University, April.

2003

(Non)native-like ultimate attainment: The influence of L1 prosodic structure on L2 morphology.

Goad, H. & L. White

Boston University Conference on Language Development (BU) 28, November.

Ultimate attainment of L2 inflection: Effects of L1 prosodic structure.

Goad, H. & L. White

European Conference on Second Language Acquisition (EUROSLA) 13, Edinburgh, September.

2002

Missing surface inflection in SLA: A prosodic account.

Goad, H., L. White & J. Steele

Boston University Conference on Language Development (BU) 27, November.

2001

Assimilation asymmetries in early grammars.

Goad, H.

Colloquium Series of the Department of Linguistics, University of Pittsburgh, April.

2000

Are children’s grammars possible grammars?

Goad, H.

Annual Meeting of the Linguistics Association of Great Britain (LAGB), University College London, April.

Asymmetries between child and adult grammars: Is maturation needed?

Goad, H.

Colloquium Series of the Department of Linguistics and of the Department of French and Italian, Indiana University, September.

Asymmetries in the phonologies of early and end-state grammars.

Goad, H.

Department of Linguistics & English Language Colloquium Series, University of Durham, England, May.

Front vowels and coronality: Problems with the constriction-based model of feature geometry.

Goad, H.

Phonology Circle, University of Essex, March.

Maturation in an OT grammar?

Goad, H.

Phonology Circle, University of Essex, March.

Syllabification at the right-edge of words.

Goad, H.

Phonology Circle, University of Essex, March.

Top of page