Julie Anne Legate

Last updated
Julie Anne Legate
Nationality Canadian
Education
Occupations
  • Linguist
  • professor

Julie Anne Legate (born 1972) is a professor in the department of linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania. [1]

Contents

Education and research

Legate earned her B.A. from York University in 1995 and her M.A. from the University of Toronto in 1997. She received her Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2002, writing a dissertation on the Warlpiri language, under the supervision of Noam Chomsky and Sabine Iatridou. [2] [3]

She works in the areas of syntax and morphology. Her work investigates the structural representation of voice in syntax, beginning with a focus on Acehnese, a language spoken in Indonesia, but also including evidence from structures in Celtic, Scandinavian, and Slavic, broadening current cross-linguistic understanding of passive-like constructions. [4]

Honors

Since 2015 Legate has been editor-in-chief of the journal Natural Language and Linguistic Theory . [5] [6]

Key publications

Articles and chapters

JA Legate and CD Yang. 2002. Empirical re-assessment of stimulus poverty arguments. The Linguistic Review 19, 151–162. https://doi.org/10.1515/tlir.19.1-2.151.

JA Legate. 2003. Some interface properties of the phase. Linguistic Inquiry 34(3), 506–516. JSTOR   4179245

Legate, J. A., & Yang, C. 2007. Morphosyntactic Learning and the Development of Tense. Language Acquisition14(3), 315–344. JSTOR   20462495

JA Legate. 2008. Morphological and abstract case. Linguistic Inquiry 39, 55–101. JSTOR   40071421.

JA Legate. 2012. Subjects in Acehnese and the Nature of the Passive. Language 88(3), 495–525. https://doi.org/10.1353/lan.2012.0069

JA Legate, Faruk Akkus, Milena Sereikaite, Don Ringe. 2020. On Passives of Passives. Language 96, 771–818. doi : 10.1353/lan.2020.0062

Books

JA Legate. 2014. Voice and v: Lessons from Acehnese. (Linguistic Inquiry Monographs). MIT Press.

https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/9780262028141.001.0001 [7]

Related Research Articles

In grammar, a ditransitiveverb is a transitive verb whose contextual use corresponds to a subject and two objects which refer to a theme and a recipient. According to certain linguistics considerations, these objects may be called direct and indirect, or primary and secondary. This is in contrast to monotransitive verbs, whose contextual use corresponds to only one object.

In linguistics, an object is any of several types of arguments. In subject-prominent, nominative-accusative languages such as English, a transitive verb typically distinguishes between its subject and any of its objects, which can include but are not limited to direct objects, indirect objects, and arguments of adpositions ; the latter are more accurately termed oblique arguments, thus including other arguments not covered by core grammatical roles, such as those governed by case morphology or relational nouns . In ergative-absolutive languages, for example most Australian Aboriginal languages, the term "subject" is ambiguous, and thus the term "agent" is often used instead to contrast with "object", such that basic word order is often spoken of in terms such as Agent-Object-Verb (AOV) instead of Subject-Object-Verb (SOV). Topic-prominent languages, such as Mandarin, focus their grammars less on the subject-object or agent-object dichotomies but rather on the pragmatic dichotomy of topic and comment.

In linguistic typology, ergative–absolutive alignment is a type of morphosyntactic alignment in which the single argument ("subject") of an intransitive verb behaves like the object of a transitive verb, and differently from the agent ("subject") of a transitive verb. Examples include Basque, Georgian, Mayan, Tibetan, and certain Indo-European languages. It has also been attributed to the Semitic modern Aramaic languages. Ergative languages are classified into 2 groups: those that are morphologically ergative but syntactically behave as accusative and those that—on top of being ergative morphologically—also show ergativity in syntax. No language has been recorded in which both the morphological and syntactical ergative are present. Languages that belong to the former group are more numerous than those to the latter. Dyirbal is said to be the only representative of syntactic ergativity, yet it displays accusative alignment with certain pronouns.

In linguistic typology, active–stative alignment is a type of morphosyntactic alignment in which the sole argument ("subject") of an intransitive clause is sometimes marked in the same way as an agent of a transitive verb but other times in the same way as a direct object. Languages with active–stative alignment are often called active languages.

Thomas Givon is a linguist and writer. He is one of the founders of "West Coast Functionalism", today classified as a usage-based model of language, and of the linguistics department at the University of Oregon. Givón advocates an evolutionary approach to language and communication.

Arnold Melchior Zwicky is an adjunct professor of linguistics at Stanford University and Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of linguistics at the Ohio State University. The Linguistic Society of America’s Arnold Zwicky Award, given for the first time in 2021, is intended to recognize the contributions of LGBTQ+ scholars in linguistics and is named for Zwicky, the first LGBTQ+ President of the LSA.

Marianne Mithun is an American linguist specializing in American Indian languages and language typology. She is a professor of linguistics at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where she has held an academic position since 1986.

Heidi Britton Harley is a Professor of Linguistics at the University of Arizona. Her areas of specialization are formal syntactic theory, morphology, and lexical semantics.

In linguistics, transitivity is a property of verbs that relates to whether a verb can take objects and how many such objects a verb can take. It is closely related to valency, which considers other verb arguments in addition to direct objects. The obligatory noun phrases and prepositional phrases determine how many arguments a predicate has. Obligatory elements are considered arguments while optional ones are never counted in the list of arguments.

Linguistic categories include

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Acehnese language</span> Austronesian language spoken in Indonesia

Acehnese or Achinese is an Austronesian language natively spoken by the Acehnese people in Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia. This language is also spoken by Acehnese descendants in some parts of Malaysia like Yan, in Kedah. Acehnese is used as the co-official language in the province of Aceh, Indonesia. Besides Indonesian used as the official language.

Sandra (Sandy) Chung is an American linguist and distinguished professor emerita at the Department of Linguistics at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her research focuses on Austronesian languages and syntax.

Beth Levin is an American linguist who is currently the William H. Bonsall Professor in the Humanities at Stanford University. Her research investigates the lexical semantics of verbs, particularly the representation of events and the kind of morphosyntactic devices that English and other languages use to express events and their participants.

Georgia M. Green is an American linguist and academic. She is an emeritus professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her research has focused on pragmatics, speaker intention, word order and meaning. She has been an advisory editor for several linguistics journals or publishers and she serves on the usage committee for the American Heritage Dictionary.

Maria “Masha” Polinsky is an American linguist specializing in theoretical syntax and study of heritage languages.

Lisa Cheng is a linguist with specialisation in theoretical syntax. She is a Chair Professor of Linguistics and Language at the Department of Linguistics, Leiden University, and one of the founding members of the Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition.

Carlota Smith was an American linguist. She was professor of linguistics at the University of Texas at Austin for 38 years.

Raffaella Zanuttini is an Italian linguist whose research focuses primarily on syntax and linguistic variation. She is a Professor of Linguistics at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.

Amy Rose Deal is associate professor of linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley. She works in the areas of syntax, semantics and morphology, on topics including agreement, indexical shift, ergativity, the person-case constraint, the mass/count distinction, and relative clauses. She has worked extensively on the grammar of the Sahaptin language Nez Perce. Deal is Editor-in-Chief of Natural Language Semantics, a major journal in the field.

Henk van Riemsdijk is a Dutch linguist and professor emeritus at Tilburg University.

References

  1. "Faculty | Department of Linguistics".
  2. MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, http://www.ai.mit.edu/projects/dm/theses/legate02.pdf
  3. Pylkkänen, Liina. 2008. Introducing Arguments, MIT Press, 2008 p. ix
  4. "Google Scholar - Julie Anne Legate". scholar.google.se. Retrieved 2018-06-03.
  5. NLLT Editorial Board https://www.springer.com/education+%26+language/linguistics/journal/11049?detailsPage=editorialBoard
  6. Blake Cole. "Common Tongues Associate Professor of Linguistics Julie Legate examines language structures." Omnia, Tuesday, August 26, 2014. https://omnia.sas.upenn.edu/story/common-tongues.
  7. Victoria Chen, 2016. "To See a World in a Grain of Sand: Review of Legate (2014)" Oceanic Linguistics 55: 1, 290-297.