Eleni Papadamou
I graduated from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki with a BA Degree in Philology (specialization in Medieval and Modern Greek Studies) in 2000, and in 2004 I received my second BA Degree in Philology (specialization in Linguistics) from the same university. In 2008 I received my Master's Degree in Historical and Balkan Linguistics from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and in 2018 I completed my Ph.D degree at the school of Philology (Department of Linguistics) under the supervision of Prof. G. Papanastasiou at the same university. I am currently a postdoctoral fellow at the school of philology of Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and a research assistant at the Institute of Modern Greek Studies (Manolis Triandaphyllidis Foundation).
As an Erasmus exchange student, I spent a spring semester at the University Ca' Foscari in Venice in 2004, where I attented intensive plenary lectures on Sociolinguistics with a focus on the teaching of minority languages and on the History of Medieval and Modern Greek Language.
I am conducting my research at the Institute of Modern Greek Studies (Manolis Triandaphyllidis Foundation) of Aristotle university of Thessaloniki, where I participate in the research project Modern Greek Dialects as a research assistant (2005-2007), as researcher seconded from Secondary Education (2009-2010/2011-2013/2015-) and as an external research collaborator (2010-2011/2013-2015). My research duties include participation in field work, collection of data and data processing. My participation in the preparation of Prof. Chr. Tzitzilis' volume 'Modern Greek Dialects' enhanced my interest in Dialectology and led me to the choice of my dissertation topic which involves the morphological system of northern dialects of the area of Kastoria in the light of relationship between dialectology and Balkan lingustics. Part of the results of my research activity at the Institute of Modern Greek Studies (Manolis Triandaphyllidis Foundation) and my Ph.D research was published in Proceedings of various International Conferences focusing on Dialectology and Contact linguistics in which I participated.
Among my studies on Balkan Languages and Balkan Linguistics I attended two Summer Workshops, one at the University Alexandru Ioan Cuza in Romania in 1999, where I followed a course on Romanian Language and Civilization and a second one in 2005 at the International Centre for Bulgarian Studies, St. Cyril and St. Methodius of the University of Veliko Turnovo in Bulgaria, where I took a course in Bulgarian Language and Civilization. I also attended a course on Romani at the Department of Linguistics at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.
My research interests include Ancient and Modern Greek Dialectology, Historical and Balkan Linguistics, Contact Linguistics, Dialectology and Education.
I speak two foreign Languages: English (C2) and Italian (B2).
Supervisors: Prof. G. Papanastasiou, Prof. Chr. Tzitzilis, Prof. Dor. Kyriazis
As an Erasmus exchange student, I spent a spring semester at the University Ca' Foscari in Venice in 2004, where I attented intensive plenary lectures on Sociolinguistics with a focus on the teaching of minority languages and on the History of Medieval and Modern Greek Language.
I am conducting my research at the Institute of Modern Greek Studies (Manolis Triandaphyllidis Foundation) of Aristotle university of Thessaloniki, where I participate in the research project Modern Greek Dialects as a research assistant (2005-2007), as researcher seconded from Secondary Education (2009-2010/2011-2013/2015-) and as an external research collaborator (2010-2011/2013-2015). My research duties include participation in field work, collection of data and data processing. My participation in the preparation of Prof. Chr. Tzitzilis' volume 'Modern Greek Dialects' enhanced my interest in Dialectology and led me to the choice of my dissertation topic which involves the morphological system of northern dialects of the area of Kastoria in the light of relationship between dialectology and Balkan lingustics. Part of the results of my research activity at the Institute of Modern Greek Studies (Manolis Triandaphyllidis Foundation) and my Ph.D research was published in Proceedings of various International Conferences focusing on Dialectology and Contact linguistics in which I participated.
Among my studies on Balkan Languages and Balkan Linguistics I attended two Summer Workshops, one at the University Alexandru Ioan Cuza in Romania in 1999, where I followed a course on Romanian Language and Civilization and a second one in 2005 at the International Centre for Bulgarian Studies, St. Cyril and St. Methodius of the University of Veliko Turnovo in Bulgaria, where I took a course in Bulgarian Language and Civilization. I also attended a course on Romani at the Department of Linguistics at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.
My research interests include Ancient and Modern Greek Dialectology, Historical and Balkan Linguistics, Contact Linguistics, Dialectology and Education.
I speak two foreign Languages: English (C2) and Italian (B2).
Supervisors: Prof. G. Papanastasiou, Prof. Chr. Tzitzilis, Prof. Dor. Kyriazis
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PhD Dissertation by Eleni Papadamou
MPHIL THESIS by Eleni Papadamou
CONFERENCE PAPER by Eleni Papadamou
which seems to have more Balkan features, semantic and phonetic restrictions on the choice of relevant adjectives are examined. Analyzing structures of the 3rd category and following Τζιτζιλής, we identified two models of partial reduplication: a Greek one, characterized by reduplication of the first syllable and of the first consonant of the next syllable, and a Turkish one, characterized by reduplication of the first syllable + one consonant.
Papers by Eleni Papadamou
which seems to have more Balkan features, semantic and phonetic restrictions on the choice of relevant adjectives are examined. Analyzing structures of the 3rd category and following Τζιτζιλής, we identified two models of partial reduplication: a Greek one, characterized by reduplication of the first syllable and of the first consonant of the next syllable, and a Turkish one, characterized by reduplication of the first syllable + one consonant.