Canonical Morphology and Syntax
Edited by Dunstan Brown, Marina Chumakina, and Greville G. Corbett
Author Information
Dunstan Brown is Professor of Linguistics at the University of York. His research interests include autonomous morphology, morphology-syntax interaction and typology. His recent work has focused on describing and understanding different aspects of morphological complexity, notably The Syntax-Morphology Interface: A Study of Syncretism (with Matthew Baerman and Greville G. Corbett, CUP 2005) and Network Morphology (with Andrew Hippisley, CUP 2012).
Marina Chumakina is a Research Fellow in the Surrey Morphology Group, University of Surrey. Her work focuses on Nakh-Daghestanian languages and typology. She has done extensive fieldwork on Archi language resulting in an electronic Archi Dictionary (together with Dunstan Brown, Greville G. Corbett and Harley Quilliam).
Greville G. Corbett is Distinguished Professor of Linguistics, University of Surrey, and leads the Surrey Morphology Group. He works on the typology of features, as in Gender (1991), Number (2000) and Agreement (2006) and Features (forthcoming), all with Cambridge UP. Recently he has been developing the canonical approach to typology. He is one of the originators of Network Morphology; see The Syntax-Morphology Interface: A Study of Syncretism (with Matthew Baerman and Dunstan Brown, CUP 2005).
Contributors:
Dunstan Brown, University of York
Maina Chumakina, Surrey Morphology Group
Greville G. Corbett, Surrey Morphology Group
Dik Bakker, University of Amsterdam
Oliver Bond, Surrey Morphology Group
Nicholas Evans, Australian national University College of Asia/Pacific
Martin Everaert, Utrecht Institute of Linguistics
Scott Farrar, University of Washington
Ana Luís, University of Coimbra
Irina Nikolaeva, University of London
Late Anna Siewierska
Andrew Spencer, University of Essex