12/06/2026
Semantics of Natural Languages (SNL) is here 🎉
SNL is a new diamond open access journal dedicated to the study of meaning in natural languages — and the scholar-owned, scholar-led intellectual successor to Natural Language Semantics (NLS). SNL is published with Open Library of Humanities under the auspices of LingOA.
🔗 Visit us: https://snl-journal.org/
The Editors
Amy Rose Deal, Clemens Mayr, Florian Schwarz
11/06/2026
We are happy to host Karen Emmorey for a talk next week on “Linguistic and neural consequences of iconicity in American Sign Language”
Sign language interpretation will be porvided for interested deaf researchers.
Find more information on the talks on our website! The link is in bio.
27/05/2026
Highlights from WCCFL 44! 🌎✨
Associated linguists recently gathered in Mexico City for the 44th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics (WCCFL), hosted by the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) from May 6th–8th.
A fantastic few days of exchanging ideas on theoretical and formal language analysis.
📸 From left to right: Yasaman Sanei, Petr Kusliy, Gautam Ottur, Dmitry Privoznov, Ziling Zhu, and Tamari Berulava.
26/05/2026
𝗟𝗜𝗡𝗚 𝗧𝗔𝗟𝗞
A shared talk by George Walkden and Marc Meisezahl coming up this week!
Find more information on the talks on our website! The link is in bio.
18/05/2026
Our upcoming talks for the week!
Find more information on the talks on our website! The link is in bio.
11/05/2026
𝗟𝗜𝗡𝗚 𝗧𝗔𝗟𝗞
Two talks this week with Kyle Johnson and Moreno Mitrović!
Find more information on the talks on our website! The link is in bio.
04/05/2026
Excited to announce an upcoming workshop featuring Salikoko S. Mufwene from The University of Chicago! 🎓
Title: “Language Endangerment and Loss as Facets of Language Evolution”
📅 Date: May 7, 2026
⏳Registration Deadline: May 5 (Only 25 seats available)
🔗 Link: Check our bio
📍 Location: Heyne House, Papendiek 16, Göttingen
See you there! ✨
25/03/2026
It was a pleasure to be a part of the Young Africanists’ Research Network (YARN)!
This event, held on 19-20th of March, brought together early-career researchers and established scholars to discuss the rich diversity of African languages and linguistics. From insightful presentations to lively debates, it was a fantastic event of academic exchange and community building.
A huge thank you to everyone who participated and shared their research. We are proud to support a space where the next generation of linguists can thrive!