Charles Reiss Explained

Charles Reiss is an American linguistics professor teaching at Concordia University in Montreal.

His contributions to linguistics have been in the area of phonology, historical linguistics, and cognitive science. Along with colleague Mark Hale, he is a proponent of substance-free phonology, the idea that phonetic substance is inaccessible to phonological computation (see paper "Substance abuse and ").

He graduated from Swarthmore College (BA) and Harvard University (PhD).

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Archived copy . 2012-06-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120320034829/http://www.hum.uit.no/a/kraemer/HnRLingua.pdf . 2012-03-20 . Kramer, M., Book review. J. Lingua (2009), (Accessed Sep. 2011)
  2. de Lacy, Paul (2009) Mark Hale & Charles Reiss, The phonological enterprise. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008. Pp. xii+292.Journal of Linguistics, 45: 719-724
  3. Kim, Yuni (2011). Review of M. Hale & C. Reiss (2008), The Phonological Enterprise. Phonology 28(2): 283-289.
  4. https://linguistlist.org/issues/22/22-2895/ Review By Michael Cahill on LinguistList