Other qualifications directly relevant to courses taught
ENG/LIN 2720, Basic Concepts in Linguistics, 3 credits, Winter 2024
ENG/LIN 7720, Advanced Studies in Language Use: Language Variation and Evolution, 3 credits, Winter 2024
ENG/LIN 5740/5300, Syntax, 3 credits, Fall 2023
ENG/LIN 5700, Introduction to Linguistic Theory, 3 credits, Fall 2023
Research Description
I am a linguist with research interests in syntax, Slavic syntax, and the evolution of syntax. My research focus in the past eight years has been on understanding how and why human language evolved. My findings lead to the conclusion that syntax evolved gradually (through well-defined stages), and that these stages are not only still evident in various modern language constructions (‘fossils’), but that they also provide a scaffolding for building more complex syntactic structures. The approach involves an internal reconstruction of syntactic stages based on the mainstream syntactic theory, Minimalism (e.g. Chomsky 1995). By reconstructing a particular path along which syntax evolved, this approach is able to explain some crucial properties of language design itself, as well as to reveal the selection pressures that could have been involved in the evolution of syntax. This approach also sheds light on some major typological parameters of crosslinguistic variation, including those involving the expression of transitivity and tense marking. The proposal is not only consistent with the forces of natural/sexual selection (e.g. Darwin 1874), but also dependent on them to explain the outcome of syntax. The postulates of this proposal are specific enough and at the right level of granularity to meaningfully engage the postulates in the fields such as neuroscience and genetics.