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Ora Matushansky, 2006 Syntax Guru

From Kyle Johnson:

This year's syntax guru is Ora Matushansky. She arrived on April 18, and she will be in residence until Thursday, April 27. She is housed in Barbara Partee's office in South College.

Ora presently has a position as a researcher at CNRS/Universite Paris VIII. She taught previously at L'Ecole Normal Superieure. She finished her PhD at MIT in 2002 with a dissertation on a famous problem in the syntax of DPs -- degree phrase movement (illustrated by, for example: so tedious an email). She squeezed out of that phenomenon an interesting set of conclusions about how the syntax and semantics function together in putting adjectives, numerals and determiners together. She has done interesting work on the syntax of comparatives and superlatives --- constructions related to those studied in her dissertation, on "phases," and what defines them, on the syntax of head movement, on the morphology/syntax interface in Russian inflectional paradigms, on partitives and pseudo- partitives, on the scope of adjectives and on names, and name-like predicates. (This is an incomplete list.) You can learn more about her work, her present research projects, and see what she looks like by visiting her website.

She will give a talk on Wednesday, April 26, at 2:30 pm, on comparatives/superlatives. The title, an abstract, and the location will be posted next week.

[Thanks, Kyle, for bringing in these wonderful visitors!]