Edith A. Moravcsik Explained

Edith Andrea Moravcsik
Birth Date:2 May 1939
Birth Place:Budapest, Hungary
Citizenship:American
Nationality:Hungarian
Alma Mater:Eötvös Loránd University
Known For:Moravcsik universals of borrowing

Edith Andrea Moravcsik (in Hungarian pronounced as /edit moravt͡ʃik/) (born 1939) is a Hungarian-born American linguist.

Career

Edith Andrea Moravcsik[1] was born May 2, 1939, in Budapest, Hungary as the daughter of Gyula Moravcsik. Julius Moravcsik and Michael Moravcsik were her brothers. Since 1964, she has been living in the United States.[2] Her early training in Hungary was in Classics.

Education and teaching

In 1971, she received her Ph.D. in linguistics at Indiana University. Between 1968 and 1976, she was a member of the Language Universals Project at Stanford University under the direction of Joseph Greenberg and Charles Ferguson. After over 30 years of teaching at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, she retired from this institution as professor emeritus in 2009. She was elected an external member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 2019.[3]

Books authored

Recent books co-edited

Selected papers

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Edith Moravcsik | Linguistics.
  2. http://www.skase.sk/Volumes/JTL31/pdf_doc/08.pdf
  3. https://mta.hu/data/dokumentumok/magyar_tudomanyossag_kulfoldon/MTA_MTK_Eb_hirlevel_2019_08_15.pdf