Mario Montalbetti
Mario Manuel Bartolo Montalbetti Solari (born 1953 in Callao) is a Peruvian syntactician and a professor of linguistics within the Department of Linguistics at the University of Arizona, as well as a poet.
Career
Mario Montalbetti studied Literature in Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. He holds a PhD in Linguistics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Currently, he holds the title of Associate Professor in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Arizona and is also a member of the faculty of the Second Language Acquisition and Teaching (SLAT) Program and the Center for Latin American Studies. His research interests include theoretical linguistics and Spanish morphology and syntax.[1]
Publications
- Montalbetti, Mario; K. Tuite, R. Schneider, and R. Chametzky (eds.) (1982). "Three ways to get tough". Papers from the Eighteenth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society. University of Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society. pp. 348–366.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
- Montalbetti, Mario; Mamuro Saito (1983). "On certain (tough) differences between Spanish and English". In P. Sells; C. Jones (eds.). Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Meeting of the North East Linguistics Conference. Amherst, Mass.: GLSA publications. pp. 191–198.
- Montalbetti, Mario (1984). "After binding: On the interpretation of pronouns". hdl:1721.1/15222. Cite journal requires
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- Montalbetti, Mario; Kenneth Wexler (1985). "Binding is linking". WCCFL. 4: 228–246.
- Montalbetti, Mario; O. Jaeggli & C. Silva-Corvalán (eds.) (1986). "How pro is it?". Studies in Romance linguistics. Dordrecht: Foris. pp. 137–152.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
- Montalbetti, Mario (1997). Fin desierto y otros poemas. Lima, Perú: Hueso Húmero ediciones.
- Montalbetti, Mario (2002). Llantos elíseos. Dordrecht: Foris. ISBN 9972-852-05-9.
gollark: Our cluster management systems just automatically select for productivity.
gollark: See, wage growth cost us capital which could otherwise be fed to our capital generators, so we just use orbital mind control laser backscatter to nondestructively extract neural patterns from arbitrary people, then execute them in parallel at a few thousand times real time speed on our computing clusters.
gollark: We have employees, we don't really *worry* about them.
gollark: We mostly just offload doodling to specialized neural networks.
gollark: You doodle *manually*, even?
See also
- Literature of Peru
References
- "Faculty Detail Page : Spanish and Portuguese". The University of Arizona. Retrieved 22 May 2009.
External links
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