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So yes, Iamp;#39;m going to be speaking on word division in Sicilian inscriptions so essentially - Iamp;#39;ve now started working for the CrossReads project in Oxford which is looking at the - well itamp;#39;s essentially amassing all the Sicilian inscriptions that are known into a digital corpus that you can visit and itamp;#39;s a work in progress and essentially I am coming in to do some sort of linguisticky things on that. And the first linguisticky thing Iamp;#39;ve done is to take some of the things Iamp;#39;ve been working on in CREWS and apply them to what we get in Sicily. So that is what Iamp;#39;m going to be speaking on right now. So firstly, the question at issue is when you write an inscription of any kind or any kind of document, do you separate words? And if you separate words what do you think a word is? And it turns out that the answer to this question isnamp;#39;t as perhaps straightforward as might at first seem. So, for example,