LINGUISTS
LINGUISTS
LINGUISTS
Age: 95
December 7, 1928
Noam Chomsky is a renowned American linguist,
philosopher, cognitive scientist, historian, and social critic. He
was born on December 7, 1928, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
USA. Chomsky is widely recognized for his groundbreaking
contributions to the field of linguistics, particularly his theory of
generative grammar and the concept of
Chomsky's work in linguistics revolutionized the understanding
of language acquisition and the innate structures underlying
human language. His theory posits that humans are born with
an innate ability to acquire language and that there are universal
grammatical principles shared by all languages.
Two years later at the age of 21, Saussure studied for a year
in Berlin, where he wrote his only full-length work titled Mémoire
sur le système primitif des voyelles dans les langues indo-
européenes. He returned to Leipzig and was awarded his
doctorate in 1880. Soon afterwards he relocated to Paris, where
he would lecture on ancient and modern languages for eleven
years before returning to Geneva in 1891.
Bloomfield’s first position after receiving his PH.D. in June 1909 was
as instructor in German at the University of Cincinnati; after one year he
moved to the University of Illinois at the same rank. In 1913, doubtless in
part because of his completion of An Introduction to the Study of Language
(1914), he was promoted to assistant professor of comparative philology and
German and was granted a year’s leave of absence, which he spent at
Leipzig and Göttingen with such scholars as August Leskien and Karl
Brugmann. His respect for these scholars, as for Prokosch, was abiding.
Once, thirty years later, he said to me that we had learned nothing
important about language not already known to Leskien.
EDWARD SAPIR
Jan. 26, 1884 – Feb. 4, 1939
Edward Sapir (born January 26, 1884, Lauenburg, Pomerania,
Germany [now Lębork, Poland]—died February 4, 1939, New Haven,
Connecticut, U.S.) one of the foremost American linguists and
anthropologists of his time, most widely known for his contributions to the
study of North American Indian languages. A founder of ethnolinguistics,
which considers the relationship of culture to language, he was also a
principal developer of the American (descriptive) school of structural
linguistics. Sapir, the son of an Orthodox Jewish rabbi, was taken to the
United States at age five. As a graduate student at Columbia University, he
came under the influence of the noted anthropologist Franz Boas, who
directed his attention to the rich possibilities of linguistic anthropology. For
about six years he studied the languages of the Yana, Paiute, and other
indigenous peoples in the western United States.
today.