List of all FDG Online Lectures
Programme 2020
December 11, 2020, 15:00 CET: Kees Hengeveld, Adverbs in Functional Discourse GrammarProgramme 2021
February 12, 2021, 15:00 CET:
Evelien Keizer & Riccardo Giomi, Extra-clausal constituents in FDG: function and placement.
March 12, 2021, 15:00 CET: Michel Fontes, The lexicalization of ainda bem: a FDG approach.
April 9, 2021, 15:00 CET: Riccardo Giomi, Aspects of an FDG account of grammaticalization.
May 14, 2021, 15:00 CET: Tamara Terbul, The application of Functional Discourse Grammar to Korean.
June 11, 2021, 15:00 CET: FG Research Group IBILCE/UNESP, Coordination in Functional Discourse Grammar.
September 17, 2021, 15:00 CET: Daniel García Velasco, Semantics in Functional Discourse Grammar.
October 8, 2021, 15:00 CET: Elnora ten Wolde, A hell of a presentation: a FDG account of the English binominal noun phrase.
November 12, 2021, 15:00 CET: Cassandra Freiberg, Starting from the Discourse Act: towards a FDG-description of Ancient Greek.
December 10, 2021, 15:00 CET: Monielly Serafim, Coercion of proper names in Portuguese.
Programme 2022
February 11, 2022, 15:00 CET:
Hella Olbertz, Reportatives, quotatives and miratives in Spanish in contact with Quechua.
March 11, 2022, 15:00 CET: Ezra La Roi, The diachrony of counterfactual moods and modals in Ancient Greek: a functional perspective.
April 8, 2022, 15:00 CET: Hongmei Fang & Kees Hengeveld, Sentence-final particles in Mandarin.
May 13, 2022, 15:00 CET: Marco Favaro, Illocutionary modification and modal particles in Romance languages: towards a unifying account.
June 10, 2022, 15:00 CET: Maximilian Weiß, Backchannels in Functional Discourse Grammar.
September 9, 2022, 15:00 CET: Carlos García Castillero, The name of the name: the development of the linguistic sense of the Ancient Greek terms homonymos, synonymos and paronymos.
October 14, 2022, 15:00 CET:
Kees Hengeveld, The focalizing copula in Colombian Spanish.
November 11, 2022, 15:00 CET: Carolina Pedro & Talita Garcia, Spanish adversative pero ‘but’: a Functional Discourse Grammar approach.
December 9, 2022, 15:00 CET:
Taísa Oliveira & Michel Fontes, A hierarchical approach to the grammaticalization of the 1pl pronoun a gente ‘people’.
Programme 2023
February 10, 2023, 15:00 CET:
Ventura Salazar García, Additive focus particles in Spanish: domains and scopes.
March 10, 2023, 15:00 CET: Michel Fontes, Complex modifiers and gradualness in FDG.
April 14, 2023, 15:00 CET: Thomas Schwaiger, Morphology in FDG from a comparative theoretical perspective: An update.
May 12, 2023, 15:00 CET: Lachlan Mackenzie, Basic negation as highest negation?
June 9, 2023, 15:00 CET: Riccardo Giomi & An Van linden, Combined marking of reflexivity: An FDG account.
September 8, 2023, 15:00 CET: Zlatan Kojadinović, Vocatives: The interface between IL and PL.
October 13, 2023, 15:00 CET:
Vitor Silva, A new approach to non-witnessed evidentiality.
November 10, 2023, 15:00 CET: Ewa Zakrzewska, Constituent order and constituent weight in Bohairic Coptic.
December 8, 2023, 15:00 CET:
Kees Hengeveld & Hella Olbertz, Modality in Functional Discourse Grammar.
Programme 2024
February 9, 2024, 15:00 CET: Arnaldo Rodrigues de Lima, On nonfluent aphasia: contributions of FDG to a discursive neurolinguistic analysis.March 8, 2024, 15:00 CET: Martina Wiltschko, Syntactic roots of communicative interaction: Empirical and theoretical implications.
April 12, 2024, 15:00 CET: Felix Berner, Attributive measure phrases in the English Noun Phrase.
May 10, 2024, 15:00 CET: Nathalia Pereira de Souza Martins, The linearization of post-head NP modifiers in Brazilian Portuguese.
June 14, 2024, 15:00 CET: Daniel García Velasco, Sandra Denise Gasparini Bastos, Talita Storti Garcia, Displacement in the Spanish Noun Phrase.
October 11, 2024, 15:00 CET: Elnora ten Wolde, English purpose and result adverbials in FDG: a case of so and so that.
November 8, 2024, 15:00 CET: Carmen Portero, The Versatility of mismo in Spanish: Insights from Functional Discourse Grammar.
December 13, 2024, 15:00 CET: Matthias Mittendorfer, The prosodic realization of information packaging: evidence from British English.