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Linguistics Dept.
UC Santa Cruz
1156 High Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95064-1077

Research
Overview Linguistics Research Center Collaboration among Faculty Current Reading Groups Publications from the LRC

SLUG Publications
Dissertations from SLUG Pubs Gutiérrez-Bravo 2002 Herrick 2003 Katayama 1998 Kennedy 1997 Kurisu 2001 Lee-Schoenfeld 2005 Merchant 1999 Mikkelsen 2004 Sanders 2003 Ussishkin 2000 Walker 1998

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Terms and Conditions of Use
Maintained by
webling@ling.ucsc.edu Last Reviewed on March 6th, 2008
© 2008 UC Santa Cruz
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SLUG Pubs Home Research SLUG Pubs
Ordering Dissertations from SLUG Pubs
In the spring of 1997, the graduate students of the Department of Linguistics at the University of California, Santa
Cruz organized a new venture for the linguistics graduate program,
SLUG Pubs. SLUG Pubs acts as publisher and vendor for graduate
dissertations in linguistics and recycles proceeds directly back into the
program to ensure that SLUG Pubs will continue to be available for future
linguistics graduate students.
Recent Publications
The following dissertations are the most recent SLUG Pubs publications.
Click on the title of a dissertation to view its abstract.
Publications List
The following is a list of all dissertations published by SLUG Pubs,
from 1997 to the present, in alphabetical order by author.
- Gutiérrez-Bravo, Rodrigo (2002), Structural
Markedness and Syntactic Structure: A Study of Word Order and the Left
Periphery in Mexican Spanish
- Herrick, Dylan (2003), An
Acoustic Analysis of Phonological Vowel Reduction in Six Varieties of
Catalan
- Katayama, Motoko (1998), Optimality
Theory and Japanese Loanword Phonology
- Kennedy, Christopher (1997), Projecting
the Adjective: The Syntax and Semantics of Gradability and
Comparison
- Kurisu, Kazutaka (2001), The
Phonology of Morpheme Realization
- Lee-Schoenfeld, Vera (2005),
Beyond Coherence: The Syntax of Opacity in German
- Merchant, Jason (1999), The
Syntax of Silence: Sluicing, Islands, and Identity in Ellipsis
- Mikkelsen, Line (2004), Specifying
Who: On the Structure, Meaning and Use of Specificational Copular Clauses
- Sanders, Nathan (2003), Opacity
and Sound Change in the Polish Lexicon
- Ussishkin, Adam Panter (2000), The
Emergence of Fixed Prosody
- Walker, Rachel (1998), Nasalization,
Neutral Segments, and Opacity Effects
Prices and Ordering
Dissertations are sold at the following rates:
- Priority shipping (~1 week delivery, US only): $13
- Global Priority shipping (~1 week delivery, international): $18
- International Surface Mail (1-2 months delivery, international): $15
To order a dissertation, send a check or money order for the proper amount
in US dollars, made payable to "University of California Regents", to the
following address:
SLUG Pubs
Department of Linguistics
University of California
Santa Cruz, CA 95064
USA
Be sure to enclose the following information:
- Your full name
- An address to send the dissertation to
- An email address which can be used to reach you promptly if there
is a problem with your order
- The author and name of the desired dissertation
- The number of copies of each dissertation
If you have any questions,
send us email at lrc@ling.ucsc.edu.
Publishing a Dissertation
If you are a graduate student in the linguistics department at UCSC,
and wish to have your dissertation published by SLUG Pubs, you must
be prepared to provide the following:
- A camera-ready (laser-printed) version of your dissertation. It should
be printed two pages per page ("two-up"). The format specified by UCSC
is fine. If you want to deviate from it, be sure you have adequate margins
and a legible font.
- A plain-text abstract emailed to lrc@ling.ucsc.edu.
(if you must use non-ASCII characters or special formatting like italics
in the abstract, explain the situation clearly at the beginning of your
email). This abstract can be the same as the one in your dissertation.
- An estimate of how many copies you personally expect to need (for
selling, gifts, personal library, etc.), as well as an estimate of how
many copies you expect to be sold via SLUG Pubs initially (this
aids us in knowing how many copies of a dissertation to make for the
first batch).
- Your personal webpage address and/or email address, if you want either
or both provided in your on-line abstract.
Acknowledgements
Nathan
Sanders and Rachel Walker spearheaded the initial launch of SLUG Pubs,
with input from the graduate students in the linguistics department in
the 1996-1997 academic year, in particular Jason Merchant and Chris Kennedy.
And of course, thanks to the UCSC Graduate
Student Association for providing the startup funds, without which,
SLUG Pubs wouldn't exist.
This site was last modified July 20, 2006.
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