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Felix Ameka

Ghanaian linguist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Felix Ameka
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Felix Ameka (born 1957) is a linguist working on the intersection of grammar, meaning and culture. His empirical specialisation is on West-African languages.[1] He is currently professor of Ethnolinguistic Diversity and Vitality at Leiden University[2] and teaches in the departments of Linguistics, African Languages and cultures, and African Studies.[3] In recognition of his pioneering work on cross-cultural semantics and his long-standing research ties with Australian universities, he was elected as a Corresponding Fellow to the Australian Academy of Humanities in 2019.[4]

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After undergraduate training at the University of Ghana, Legon, Ameka received his PhD in 1991 from Australian National University for a dissertation on the semantic, functional, and discourse-pragmatic aspects of the grammar of Ewe. Ameka has made seminal contributions to the cross-linguistic study of interjections, editing a highly influential special issue on 'the universal yet neglected part of speech'.[5] Ameka has pioneered research on the interaction of grammar, culture, and social structure, using the framework of Natural Semantic Metalanguage to elucidate cultural scripts and interactional resources.[6] A long-term research associate at the Max Planck Institute of Psycholinguistics, Ameka has led a large-scale comparative project on the semantics of locative predicates[7] and contributed to cross-linguistic work on the expression of motion events. With Alan Dench and Nick Evans, he co-edited an influential collection on the art of grammar writing.[8]

Ameka is editor of the Journal of African Languages and Linguistics together with Azeb Amha. Since 2015, Ameka is President of the World Congress of African Linguistics.[9]

In 2021, he was elected member of the Academia Europaea.[10]

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Key publications

  • Ameka, Felix K. 1991. Ewe. Its Grammatical Constructions and Illucutionary Devices. PhD dissertation, Australian National University.
  • Ameka, Felix K. 1992. 'Interjections. The Universal Yet Neglected Part of Speech.' Journal of Pragmatics 18 (2–3): 101–18.
  • Ameka, Felix K., Alan Dench, and Nicholas Evans, eds. 2006. Catching Language. The Standing Challenge of Grammar Writing. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
  • Ameka, Felix K., and Stephen C. Levinson. 2007. 'Introduction: The Typology and Semantics of Locative Predicates: Posturals, Positionals, and Other Beasts.' Linguistics 45 (5part6): 847–871.
  • Ameka, Felix K., and Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu, eds. 2008. Aspect and Modality in Kwa Languages. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
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References

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