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Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages and Linguistics

 

Luca Gál

Luca Gal
Position(s): 
PhD candidate
Department/Section: 
Theoretical and Applied Linguistics
Faculty of Modern & Medieval Languages & Linguistics
Contact details: 
College: 
Location: 

Faculty of Modern andÌýMedieval Languages and Linguistics Raised Faculty Building º£½ÇÉçÇø Sidgwick Avenue º£½ÇÉçÇø CB3 9DA United Kingdom

About: 

Luca has been a PhD candidate in Theoretical and Applied Linguistics since 2023.

She completed her BA in Linguistics at the º£½ÇÉçÇø (2018-2021). Her undergraduate dissertation, supervised by Dr Theresa Biberauer, focused on the application of the Evaluative Morphology framework to Hungarian frequentative suffixes. In 2022, she graduated with an MPhil in Theoretical and Applied Linguistics at the same department. In her MPhil research, she studied the replication of Italo- and Gallo-Romance evaluative morphemes in the Walser German dialects of Northern Italy, under the supervision of Prof Adam Ledgeway.

Other activities and roles:

  • Secretary of the º£½ÇÉçÇø Linguistics Forum
  • Co-organiser of RoLinC (Romance Linguistics Circle)
Teaching interests: 
  • Supervisor for CS1 (The Romance Languages)
  • Supervisor for IT1/ITA3 (Introduction to Italian Linguistics)
  • Supervisor for IT2 (Structures and Varieties of Italian)
  • Supervisor for Li11 (Historical Linguistics)
  • Supervisor for Li4 (History of English)
Research interests: 

The replication of Evaluative Morphology in Romance–non-Romance language contact

Luca’s main research interests lie in Contact Linguistics, Morphology and Romance Linguistics.

For her doctoral project, Luca is investigating the replication of Evaluative Morphology (specifically: diminutives, augmentatives, and pejoratives) focusing on the language contact between (1) Basque and Ibero/Gallo-Romance, (2) Maltese and Italo-Romance and (3) Griko and Salentino. The primary purpose of her research is to provide a comprehensive account of the replicability of Evaluative Morphology based on diverse cross-linguistic data, with a particular focus on how base selection preferences and grammatical gender are affected by contact. Her research aims to enhance the theoretical understanding of the role of sociolinguistic characteristics and typological differences in morphological replication, while providing novel insights into the position of EM in relation to derivation and inflection, and the influence of language contact on grammatical gender.