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Ellen Contini-Morava

Linguistic anthropologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ellen Contini-Morava
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Ellen Contini-Morava is an anthropological linguist, interested in the meanings of linguistic forms, discourse analysis, functional linguistics and (noun) classification; in particular, in the relationship between lexicon and grammar. She specializes in Bantu languages in general, and Swahili in particular.

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Ellen Contini-Morava (left) with her husband Jack Morava near the Burgess Shale, 1971

Education and career

Contini-Morava received her PhD from Columbia University in 1983[1] under William Diver and Erica Garcia. She is a professor emerita at the University of Virginia.[2]

Books

Contini-Morava is the author of the book Discourse Pragmatics and Semantic Categorization: The Case of Negation and Tense-Aspect with Special Reference to Swahili (Mouton de Gruyter, 1989).[3]

Her edited volumes include Between Grammar and Lexicon (edited with Yishai Tobin, John Benjamins, 2000)[4] and Cognitive and Communicative Approaches to Linguistic Analysis (edited with Robert S. Kirsner and Betsy Rodríguez-Bachiller, John Benjamins, 2004).[5]

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References

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