Peter Hugoe Matthews Explained
Peter Hugoe Matthews, FBA (10 March 1934 – 7 April 2023) was a British linguist and historian of linguistics. He was a fellow of St John's College, Cambridge, and formerly Professor and Head of the Department of Linguistics at the University of Cambridge (1980–2001). He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1985.[1]
Matthews is perhaps best known for his writings on linguistic morphology. He published two monographs on the subject.
Matthews was an early follower of Noam Chomsky, but lost enthusiasm for the "generative enterprise" during the 1960s. He described the Chomskyan revolution as "the Best Thing that has happened to linguistics in the past 2500 years" (with his tongue squarely in his cheek, of course).[2] But he also wrote that dominance of various Chomskyan ideas is not "a Good Thing, and I would not be disappointed if my study of their origins were to lead more scholars to question them".[3]
Peter Hugoe Matthews died on 7 April 2023, at the age of 89.[4]
Selected publications
- Inflectional Morphology: A theoretical study based on aspects of Latin verb conjugation (1972) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,
- (1974, 2nd revd edition 1991)
- Generative Grammar and Linguistic Competence (1979)
- Syntax (1981)
- Grammatical Theory in the United States from Bloomfield to Chomsky (1993)
- A Short History of Structural Linguistics (2001)
- (2003) Oxford University Press, Oxford
- The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Linguistics (2005, 3rd revd edition 2014) Oxford University Press, Oxford
- (2007)
- The Positions of Adjectives in English (2014) Oxford University Press, Oxford
- What Graeco-Roman Grammar was About (2019) Oxford University Press, Oxford
Notes and References
- Web site: Professor Peter Matthews FBA.
- Book: Matthews . Peter H . Grammatical theory in the United States: From Bloomfield to Chomsky . 1993 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 1.
- Book: Matthews . Peter H . Grammatical theory in the United States: From Bloomfield to Chomsky . 1993 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 3.
- Web site: In memoriam Professor P.H. Matthews (1934–2023) . The Philological Society . 11 September 2023 . 14 April 2023.