期刊名称:OCEANIC LINGUISTICS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Oceanic Linguistics is the only journal devoted exclusively to the study of the indigenous languages of the Oceanic area and parts of Southeast Asia. The languages within the scope of the journal, probably numbering over a thousand, are the original languages of Australia, the Papuan languages of New Guinea, and the languages of the Austronesian (or Malayo-Polynesian) family. Articles in Oceanic Linguistics cover issues of linguistic theory that pertain to languages of the area, report research on historical relations, or furnish new information about inadequately described languages.b
Instructions to Authors
Submission Guidelines
All submissions and editorial inquiries should be addressed to John Lynch, Editor, Oceanic Linguistics, University of the South Pacific - Emalus Campus, PMB 072, Port Vila, Vanuatu. Email the editor: oceanic@hawaii.edu
INITIAL SUBMISSION
An electronic manuscript in RTF and an original printout, plus (where applicable) a second RTF file, are requested of all authors with the initial submission. The second RTF file should be identical to the first, except that all special characters should have been replaced by alphanumeric coding (see below). In addition to the required RTF files, a PDF is welcomed, one with special fonts embedded, and tables and figures in place.
MANUSCRIPTS
Manuscripts should be printed on letter-size or A4 paper, with generous margins on all sides. Editorial style follows The Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), as implemented in current issues of Oceanic Linguistics. Spelling follows Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. Also followed are The Leipzig Glossing Rules: Conventions for interlinear morpheme-by-morpheme glosses, including the standard abbreviations listed there: http://www.eva.mpg.de/lingua/files/morpheme.html. A detailed style sheet is available at http://www2.hawaii.edu/~oceanic/ . On the first page of the manuscript provide the title, author's name, and professional affiliation. Do not identify the author(s) as such on any other page. On the second page, provide a self-contained and succinct abstract. Begin text on the third page. Include acknowledgments in the first note. Include a list of nonstandard abbreviations (only those not in the Leipzig rules), separated by semicolons and commas, in an early note. Place references at the end, with the information in each reference arranged according to the style used in current issues of Oceanic Linguistics, including full names of authors and editors as given, and both city and name of publisher. Note especially the style for works appearing in multiauthor volumes: "In Title, ed. by [editor(s)], pp¨Cpp."
FORMATTING
Keep formatting to a minimum. Manuscripts should be single-spaced. Please follow as closely as possible the style used in Oceanic Linguistics articles and reviews, with forms referred to within English text in italic type, but forms given in lists and tables in roman type, glosses in single quotes, quotations in double quotes, and so forth. Use boldface only in headings.
DISK PREPARATION
Electronic manuscripts may be submitted on 3 1/2" diskettes, formatted for DOS, or on CDs. The files should be saved in Rich Text Format (.rtf), which is possible on both Macs and PCs. After you have printed the final hardcopy of the manuscript to be submitted, copy that file onto the disk that will be submitted. If there are special characters not found in standard fonts, then prepare, in addition, a modified electronic file in which each special character is given a distinctive alphanumeric coding within angle-brackets (for example, bgas for bəgas, hoo for hoʔo, la for laŋ). (For this purpose, do not consider subscripts or superscripts, or italic or bold face, as special characters. Leave them as part of the formatting in the modified file.) To prepare this file, use the "search-and-replace" feature of your word processor to replace every instance of each special symbol with its distinctive alphanumeric code, even though the codes occupy more space and may thus spoil alignments. (Alignments will be restored when our typesetter replaces your codes with the proper symbols.) Codes used may be ad hoc, as long as they are clear, unambiguous, within angle-brackets, and capable of being used by the typesetter to restore the desired symbols. Authors are referred to Phonetic symbol guide, by Geoffrey K. Pullum and William A. Ladusaw (University of Chicago Press, 1986) for descriptive names in general use. A separate hardcopy listing of all codes used should be included with the manuscript.
TABLES & FIGURES
Any material that you want to appear entirely on one page should be put in a table or figure. Figures should be submitted in a standard graphic format (as a separate file) on the disk. Tables and figures should be put on separate pages after the references at the end of the manuscript. In the text, indicate approximate placement of tables and figures as a separate paragraph consisting of simply
Instructions to Authors style.pdf for author.pdf
Editorial Board
Editorial Board
Editor
John Lynch
Managing Editor
Byron W. Bender
Review Editor
Robert Blust University of Hawaii
Associate Editors
Niko Besnier, University of California, Los Angeles Juliette Blevins, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig James T. Collins, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia William Davies, University of Iowa Michael Forman, University of Hawaii Matthew Gordon, University of California, Santa Barbara Frantisek Lichtenberk, Auckland University Malcolm D. Ross, Australian National University Elizabeth Zeitoun, Academia Sinica R. David Zorc, MMcNeil Technologies Language Research Center
Editorial Advisory Board
Ernesto Constantino, Philippines Videa De Guzman, Canada Isidore Dyen, U.S.A. George W. Grace, U.S.A. Paul Jen-kuei Li, Taiwan George B. Milner, England Bernd Nothofer, Germany Andrew K. Pawley, Australia Lawrence A. Reid, U.S.A. Suzanne Romaine, England Albert J Schutz, U.S.A.
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