Dear colleagues,
We are pleased to announce "The LINGUINDIC Conference: Modern Linguistics and Ancient India", which will take place on 12–14 June 2025 at Wolfson College, University
 of Oxford, UK. 
We invite submission of abstracts in any subject related
 to Ancient Indian languages and linguistics, addressing, but not 
limited to, the following topics:
        
        - 
                Ancient Indian contributions to linguistic thought 
(broadly conceived, including e.g. Pāṇinian vyākaraṇa, non-Pāṇinian 
vyākaraṇa, nirvacana, śikṣā, nirukta, Mīmāṃsā, Nyāya, etc.).
            
- 
                Modern linguistic analyses (in any field of linguistics)
 of phenomena in ancient Indian languages (Sanskrit, Tamil, Pali, 
Prakrit), for example compounding (samāsa), case (kāraka), etc.
            
- 
                Work that interfaces modern linguistics and the ancient Indian linguistic traditions;
            
- 
                    for example, work that explores the relevance of ancient Indian linguistic analyses for modern linguistics,
                
- 
                    or work that offers a modern linguistic take on a 
topic originally analysed by the ancient Indian linguistic tradition.
                
            Presentations will last 20 minutes, with an additional 10 mins for discussion.
        
        Abstract Submission Guidelines
        
            Anonymized abstracts in PDF format should be sent to linguindic@ames.ox.ac.uk by the 31 January 2025. Abstracts should be no more than 1 page excluding tables/figures and references.
        
 
        Important Dates
        
            Abstract submission deadline: 31 January 2025
            
            Notification of acceptance: 28 February 2025
        
        
            For further updates please visit the conference website: https://www.linguindic.com/conference/. For any queries please write to linguindic@ames.ox.ac.uk
        
         
Best regards,
Dr. Adriana Molina-Muñoz
Researcher 'LINGUINDIC: New ideas for modern linguistics 
from Ancient India' | Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies
Research Fellow | Wolfson College 
University of Oxford