C. M. Hammerly
C. M. Hammerly
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On the interpretation of long-distance agreement in Border Lakes Ojibwe
The aim of this article is to show that Long Distance Agreement (LDA) in Border Lakes Ojibwe (Central Algonquian) correlates, not with …
Christopher M. Hammerly
,
Eric Mathieu
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Linking agreement and movement: A case study of long distance agreement in Border Lakes Ojibwe
This paper argues for an extension of current models of Agree to capture relativized EPP effects, where a probe for movement targets an …
Christopher M. Hammerly
,
Eric Mathieu
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The relativized EPP: Evidence from agreement and word order in Border Lakes Ojibwe
This paper explores patterns of agreement and word order in the Central Algonquian language Border Lakes Ojibwe. This variety of Ojibwe …
Christopher M. Hammerly
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The interaction/satisfaction distinction is redundant: A reply to Deal (2024) and Oxford (2022)
Two recent papers on variation in agreement, one by Deal (2024) for the person-case constraint (PCC) and one by Oxford (2022) for …
Christopher M. Hammerly
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Processing relativization in Ojibwe
May 31, 2021 — Jun 4, 2021
UBC & McGill (Virtual)
Christopher M. Hammerly
A set-based representation of person features: Consequences for AGREE
This brief paper summarizes a new account of how person-animacy hierachy (PAH) effects and probe relativization should be modeled in …
Christopher M. Hammerly
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A set-based representation of person features: Consequences for AGREE
Nov 6, 2020 — Nov 8, 2020
UQAM (Virtual)
Christopher M. Hammerly
Deriving person-based prominence effects: A set-based theory of AGREE
In this talk, I argue for a new level of representation,
primitives
, which combine into sets and replace prominence scales and feature geometries in capturing person-based prominence effects in agreement. I argue this new theory has both a conceptual and empirical edge over previous accounts.
Oct 9, 2020
New York University (Virtual)
Christopher M. Hammerly
Person-based Prominence in Ojibwe
Christopher M. Hammerly
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The grammaticality asymmetry in agreement attraction reflects response bias: Experimental and modeling evidence
Christopher M. Hammerly
,
Adrian Staub
,
Brian Dillon
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