Greville G Corbett Explained

Greville G. Corbett (born 23 December 1947[1]) is Distinguished Professor of Linguistics at the University of Surrey and founder member of the Surrey Morphology Group.

Biography

He was educated at the University of Birmingham where he was awarded a BA, MA and PhD. He joined the University of Surrey in 1974. He has been a Fellow of the British Academy since 1997 and is an Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences, a Member of the Academia Europaea and an Honorary Member of the Linguistic Society of America. As an author, he is widely held in libraries worldwide. In 2017, he signed the Declaration on the Common Language of the Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks and Montenegrins.[2]

Research

He has three broad areas of interest:

  1. Typology. He works on the typology of features, as in Gender (1991), Number (2000), Agreement (2006) and Features (2012), all with Cambridge University Press. Recently, with several colleagues, he has been developing the canonical approach to typology. Within that approach he has papers in Language, on suppletion (2007) http://epubs.surrey.ac.uk/1313 and on lexical splits (2015). [3] For some years he has been developing the Canonical Typology framework,[4] which has expanded beyond its original heartland of morphology and syntax to include work in phonology and sign language.
  2. Morphosyntactic features. Number, gender, person and case all offer interesting challenges.
  3. Inflectional Morphology (especially Network Morphology)[5] the European Research Council funded project Morphological Complexity [6] which examined the ways in which morphological structure introduces complexity which has no apparent function outside this component. Corbett's resulting research on the typology of splits in paradigms has appeared in Language.[7] His most recent work is on conditions on inflection, the generalizations which cross-cut the generalizations provided by inflection classes, and concerned with the practical issue of how inflectional material is represented in a transparent and comprehensible way.

Published works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Academy of Europe: CV .
  2. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1XVGV5Z306SeDFzpdpUHhfeK-voAFdaakS48LqXfGozA/pubhtml Signatories of the Declaration on the Common Language
  3. Corbett . Greville G. . 2015 . Morphosyntactic complexity: A typology of lexical splits . Language . 91 . 1 . 145–193 . 10.1353/lan.2015.0003 . 39053032 . 1535-0665.
  4. Web site: Canonical Typology.
  5. Web site: Network Morphology.
  6. Web site: Morphological Complexity.
  7. Web site: Morphosyntactic complexity:A typology of lexical splits.