Law, Paul
Associate Professor
Department of Linguistics and Translation
City University of Hong Kong
Hong Kong
Biography
Paul Law studied linguistics at UCLA and MIT. He came to the City University of Hong Kong in 2008, after three years at the Université du Quebec à Montréal, Canada and more than ten years of research at Zentrum für Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft and teaching at the Freie Universität in Berlin, Germany. He has worked on a wide variety of languages including the less familiar languages Haitian Creole, Serbo-Croatian, Bulgarian, Malagasy, Tagalog and the Formosan language Tsou. His current research concentrates on the syntax of Tense in Mandarin Chinese, yes/no questions in the Wuhu dialect, agreement and resumptive pronouns in Breton as well as reconstruction effects.
Research Interest
Language and cognition
Publications
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2012Â Â Â Word-order and argument-marking: Japanese vs Chinese vs Naxi. International Journal of Asian Language Processing 22(3): 107-125.
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2013Â Â Â Plurality in Naxi and its typological implications. Journal of Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 6, 87-98. [Joint work with Melody Chang and Qinglian Zhao].