Nicolas Beauzée

Nicolas Beauzée (9 May 1717 in Verdun, Meuse – 23 January 1789 in Paris) was a French linguist, author of Grammaire générale (published 1767) and one of the main contributors to the Encyclopédie of Denis Diderot and Jean-Baptiste le Rond d'Alembert on the topic of grammar.[1] In 1772 he was named as the successor to Charles Pinot Duclos in the Académie française.

Life and work

Early years and tenure at École Militaire

Beauzée was born on 9 May 1717 in Verdun. The Church register for the parish of Saint-Sauveur lists his father as a labourer (manouvrier). A scholarship allowed him to attend the Jesuit college at Verdun.

Further reading

  • Bakalar, H. Nicholas (1976). "The Cartesian Legacy to the Eighteenth-Century Grammarians". MLN. 91 (4): 698–721. JSTOR 2907065.
gollark: I think he means ASCII art and stuff?
gollark: There's definitely a post on it somewhere.
gollark: Actually, the sophont ones are considered people, it's not the same.
gollark: What seems to happen on those is that they design for a primary species/biochemistry and everyone else wears suits.
gollark: You would have (many of) the same issues on planets/habs...

References

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