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Jennifer L Smith

Title: Assistant Professor
Department/School: Linguistics , CB#3155
Telephone: (919) 962-1474
Email:jlsmith@email.unc.edu
Webpage:http://www.unc.edu/~jlsmith
Appointed Year: 2001
Education:Doctorate (2002), UMass Amherst
World Area Of Focus:• East Asia 10%-24%
• International 25%-49%
• Western Europe/European Union (EU) 10%-24%
Languages:• French (limited working proficiency)
• German (elementary proficiency)
• Japanese (professional proficiency)
• Spanish (elementary proficiency)
Specialization:Phonological theory; phonological typology; syllable structure; segmental and intonational phonology of Japanese
Dissertations and Theses Supervised in Past 5 Years: 8
Relevant Courses Taught:• LING 101 Introduction to Language
• LING 101H Honors Introduction to Language
• LING 115 Linguistic Field Methods
• LING 200 Phonology
• LING 520 Linguistic Phonetics
• LING 523 Phonological Theory I
• LING 524 Phonological Theory II
• LING 527 Morphology
• LING 563 Structure of Japanese
Recent Publications:• 2017 E. Moreton, J. Smith, K. Pertsova, R. Broad, and B. Prickett. “Emergent positional privilege in novel English blends.“ Language 93(2): 347-380.
• 2016 Pinta, Justin, and Jennifer L. Smith. Spanish loans and the structure of the Guarani lexicon. To appear in Bruno Estigarríbia et al. (eds.), Guarani Linguistics in the 21st Century. Leiden: Brill.
• 2016 Smith, Jennifer L. Wh prosody is not focus prosody in Fukuoka Japanese. In Michael Kenstowicz et al. (eds.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 23. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
• 2016 Rachel Broad, Brandon Prickett, Elliott Moreton, Katya Pertsova, and Jennifer L. Smith (2016). Emergent faithfulness to proper nouns in novel English blends. In Kyeong-min Kim et al. (eds.), Proceedings of WCCFL 33, 77-87. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Proceedings Project.
• 2016 “Segmental noun/verb phonotactic differences are productive too.” In Patrick Farrell (ed.), Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America, vol. 1, article #3717. Washington, DC: LSA.
• 2015 Smith, Jennifer L. (in press). Wh prosody is not focus prosody in Fukuoka Japanese. To appear in Michael Kenstowicz, Ted Levin, and Ryo Masuda (eds.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 23. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
• 2015 Pinta, Justin, and Jennifer L. Smith (accepted). “Spanish loans and the structure of the Guaraní lexicon.” To appear in Bruno Estigarríbia, Justin Pinta, Andrew Stewart, and Zachary Wilkins (eds.), Guaraní Linguistics in the 21st Century. Brill.
• 2014 Smith, Jennifer L. In press. Wh prosody is not focus prosody in Fukuoka Japanese. To appear in Michael Kenstowicz, Ted Levin, and Ryo Masuda (eds.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 23. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
• 2014 Smith, Jennifer L. 2014. "Prototypical predicates have unmarked phonology." In John Kingston, Claire Moore-Cantwell, Joe Pater, and Robert Staubs (eds.), Supplemental Proceedings of the 2013 Meeting on Phonology, article #37. Washington, DC: Linguistic Society of America.
• 2008 Smith, Jennifer L. To appear [2008]. Source similarity in loanword adaptation: Correspondence Theory and the posited source-language representation. In Steve Parker (ed.), Phonological Argumentation: Essays on Evidence and Motivation. London: Equinox.
• 2006 Smith, Jennifer L. 2006. Loan phonology is not all perception: Evidence from Japanese loan doublets. In Timothy J. Vance and Kimberly A. Jones (eds.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 14. Stanford: CSLI, 63-74.
• 2005 Smith, Jennifer L. 2005. Comments on "Syntax-phonology interfaces in Busan Korean and Fukuoka Japanese" by Tomoyuki Kubo. In Shigeki Kaji (ed.), Cross-Linguistic Studies on Tonal Phenomena IV. Tokyo: ILCAA, 211-219.
• 1999 Smith, Jennifer L. 1999. Noun faithfulness and accent in Fukuoka Japanese. In Sonya Bird, Andrew Carnie, Jason D. Haugen, and Peter Norquest (eds.), Proceedings of WCCFL XVIII. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press, 519-531.

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