A Roadmap for WS convenors can be found here.
The list of accepted workshop can be found below. To submit a paper to any of the workshops, please select the relevant one when preparing your EasyChair submission.
Special Panel: Communicating linguistic research (Alexandru Nicolae & Marc Olivier-Loiseau)
WS1 Advances in data-driven research on lexical and semantic change (Stefano De Pascale & Haim Dubossarsky)
WS2 Body part incorporation cross-linguistically: At the crossroads of lexicon, semantics, and morphosyntax (Anna Bugaeva & Maria Koptjevskaja Tamm)
WS3 Clitics, clitic placement, and cliticisation (Marc Olivier-Loiseau)
WS4 Constructions with multiple wh-words across languages (Valentina Apresjan, Mikhail Kopotev, Piotr Sobotka & Mladen Uhlik)
WS5 Discourse coherence and clausal complementation: Diachronic pathways and diagnostic problems (Björn Wiemer, Haiping Long & Giulia Mazzola)
WS6 Heritage Speakers and Their Language Repertoire (Yulia Zuban, Anna Ritter & Andromachi Tsoukala)
WS7 Intragenetic and Areal Influences in the Uralic Language Area (Nikolett F. Gulyás, Helle Metslang & Miina Norvik)
WS8 Large Language Models for Linguistics: Applications and Implications (Natalia Levshina & Nicole Katzir)
WS9 Linguistic Perspectives on the Expression of Necessity (Patrick Duffley & and Olivier Duplâtre)
WS10 Measuring cross-linguistic distances (Ian Joo)
WS11 Microtypology: Zooming in to get at the big picture (Linda Konnerth, Sandra Auderset & Sergey Say)
WS12 (Non)finiteness and Finiteness Shifts (Dominika Skrzypek & Eystein Dahl)
WS13 Relative Clauses Across and Within Languages: Connecting Linguistic Typology and Variationist Sociolinguistics (Silvia Ballarè, Karen Beaman, Massimo Cerruti & Caterina Mauri)
WS14 Rethinking argument structure interactionally: Deviations from Who Does What to Whom across the languages (Vladimir Panov, Maria Khachaturyan & Pavel Ozerov)
WS15 Stability in the grammar of Germanic heritage and minority languages (Patrick Mächler & Ann-Marie Moser)
WS16 Subordination and coordination in language-contact situations (Jesús Olguín Martínez, Thomas Stolz, Nataliya Levkovych & Tom Bossuyt)
WS17 The morphosyntax of who knows what and how in interaction (Jenneke van der Wal, Karolina Grzech & Martina Wiltschko)
WS18 The New Arabic (Semitic) Lexicon (SLE Workshop II): Old and New Themes and Perspectives (Abdelkader Fassi Fehri & Peter Hallman)
WS19 When sounds speak: Towards a typology of sound symbolism and iconicity (Lívia Körtvélyessy & Thomas van Hoey)