Linguistic Association of Canada and the United States

The Linguistic Association of Canada and the United States (LACUS) was founded in August 1974 by a group of linguists of the Great Lakes Region. A large part of the motivation for the founding of LACUS was the reaction of many linguists against the narrowing of the field[1] following Noam Chomsky’s Generative grammar. The annual meetings of LACUS have been held at a variety of colleges and universities, in both Canada and the United States. From these annual conferences, a volume of selected papers is published under the title LACUS Forum.

Notes

  1. Newmeyer, Frederick J. 1986. Has There Been a 'Chomskyan Revolution' in Linguistics? Language Vol. 62, No. 1 pp. 1-18.
gollark: Oh, we actually just used the perfect universe simulators.
gollark: They'll have to be run through our accelerated maturation process in order to comprehend esobot by 2023, but it should be fine.
gollark: Their gender can be edited as needed for the plan.
gollark: Then we had to extrapolate forward to that child's likely future partners, reran the process again and got a grandchild!
gollark: We just extrapolated into the future to find LyricLy's likely partners' genomes, averaged them, mixed it with our recording of LyricLy's genes, and then generated a child from the result.
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