UC Santa Cruz Linguistics was well represented last weekend at the 8th annual California Universities Semantics and Pragmatics workshop (CUSP), hosted this year by Stanford University. Friday’s sessions kicked off with a presentation by Kelsey Kraus on her recent work on German modal particles. This was followed, after the break, by a presentation by Deniz Rudin on scalar and non-scalar implicatures of might and some. Tom Roberts opened the final session of the day with a talk on propositional attitudes in Estonian.
On Saturday, the Department’s CUSP presence was impressive: a visually impenetrable block of seats in the room was filled by UCSC linguists. The morning included a talk by Hitomi Hirayama, whose work on ignorance inferences of wa in Japanese left us anything but ignorant about what this contrastive marker denotes. The day was rounded out in style by a presentation from the LaLoCo group–Deniz Rudin, Karl DeVries, Karen Duek, Kelsey Kraus and Adrian Braseoveanu–on the semantics of correction. The presentation sparked lively debate, uh sorry, conversation which extended well past the official end of the workshop.