John R. Ross
American poet and linguist / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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John Robert "Haj" Ross (born May 7, 1938) is an American poet and linguist. He played a part in the development of generative semantics (as opposed to interpretive semantics) along with George Lakoff, James D. McCawley, and Paul Postal.[2] He was a professor of linguistics at MIT from 1966 to 1985 and has worked in Brazil, Singapore and British Columbia, and until spring 2021, he taught at the University of North Texas.
John R. "Haj" Ross | |
---|---|
Born | (1938-05-07) May 7, 1938 (age 85) |
Alma mater | MIT (PhD)[1] University of Pennsylvania (AM) Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität (linguistics courses) Freie Universität (general studies courses) Yale University (AB) |
Known for | islands, pied piping, sluicing, "squib" |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Syntax, Generative grammar, Generative semantics, Poetics |
Institutions | University of North Texas, MIT |
Doctoral advisor | Noam Chomsky |
Notable students | Richard S. Kayne |
Ross's 1967 MIT dissertation is a landmark in syntactic theory and documents in great detail Ross's discovery of syntactic islands.
Ross is known for his onomastic fecundity; he has coined many new terms describing syntactic phenomena, including copula switch, gapping, heavy NP shift, myopia, the penthouse principle, pied piping, scrambling, siamese sentences, sluicing, slifting, and sloppy identity. In linguistics more generally, Ross popularized the use of the term squib to refer to a short scholarly article.