24 November 2022: Marieke Meelen (II): “On filling the gaps: fieldwork on endangered languages in Nepal”

In her lecture series, Marieke Meelen will dive into the challenges of diachronic linguistic research and how to address and overcome them. The first two lectures will be online through zoom and focus on methodology: how to annotate historical data and how to get more data to fill the gaps in transmission. In the third session, which will be in-person, we’ll look at how the presented methods can help us answer research questions about language variation and change.

 

Abstract

In this session we will focus on a very pertinent issue in historical linguistics: gaps in our records. After presenting some general issues and how they can possibly be addressed, we zoom in on gathering new data from present-day spoken languages that can help us see how historical languages have evolved over time. We’ll focus on the challenges and opportunities of doing fieldwork on endangered languages spoken in Nepal in particular, as they provide vital clues as to how the languages in the Sino-Tibetan language family have evolved over time.

The lecture

Mini-Bio

Marieke Meelen’s research interests include information structure, comparative syntax and historical linguistics. She is currently part of two AHRC-funded projects: the Emergence of Egophoricity (with Prof Hill at SOAS, University of London) and The History of Subject Pronouns (with Prof Willis at Oxford University and Prof Meier in Berlin). She is also the PI of an ELDP-funded research projects documenting endangered languages in Nepal.
She is interested in NLP and corpus creation for low-resource languages.

As part of her British Academy postdoctoral fellowship, she worked on the history of V2 word orders across Indo-European languages and developing a historical treebank of Welsh. Her doctoral thesis combined methods from computational and historical linguistics to reconstruct verb-initial and verb-second word order patterns and information structure in Welsh in their Celtic historical context. She is also a computational linguistic consultant for a project on the annotation of Middle Welsh texts at the Philipps-Universität in Marburg.

Marieke was awarded her PhD at Leiden University in 2016 supervised by Prof Lisa Cheng and Prof Alexander Lubotsky.

Lecture I by Marieke Meelen

Lecture III by Marieke Meelen