Paul Hopper

Paul J. Hopper is an American linguist of British birth. In 1973, he proposed the glottalic theory[1][2] regarding the reconstruction of the Proto-Indo-European consonant inventory, in parallel with the Georgian linguist Tamaz Gamkrelidze and the Russian linguist Vyacheslav Ivanov. He later also became known for his theory of emergent grammar (Hopper 1987), for his contributions to the theory of grammaticalisation and other work dealing with the interface between grammar and usage. He currently works as the Paul Mellon Distinguished Professor of Humanities at the Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, USA.

Selected publications

  • (1973) Glottalized and murmured occlusives in Indo-European. Glotta 7: 141-166.
  • (1987) Emergent grammar. Berkeley Linguistics Society 13: 139-157. (Online on archive.org - )
  • (1993) (with Elizabeth Closs Traugott) Grammaticalization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
gollark: But *persecuting* individuals instead of just being broken and failing them... well, there are probably examples, I just don't know how exactly to find them.
gollark: Well, "it starves people" is obvious and well-documented.
gollark: I have no idea where to look up specifically "people for whom communism has been bad".
gollark: Your meme is basically "rhetoric" too.
gollark: Ah yes, because that is always true and accurate and nobody has EVER been hurt by "communism"!

References

  1. Polomé, Edgar C.; Winter, Werner (1992). Reconstructing languages and cultures. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 111–. ISBN 978-3-11-012671-6. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  2. Fallon, Paul D. (2002). The synchronic and diachronic phonology of ejectives. Psychology Press. pp. 227–. ISBN 978-0-415-93800-6. Retrieved 9 July 2011.


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