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Linguist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sharon Inkelas is a Professor and former Chair of the Linguistics Department at the University of California, Berkeley.[1]
Sharon Inkelas | |
---|---|
Occupation | Linguist |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | Stanford University |
Academic work | |
Institutions | University of California, Berkeley |
Main interests | Phonology, Morphology, Reduplication, Language acquisition, Turkish language |
Inkelas completed her Bachelor of Arts in mathematics at Pomona College in 1984 and received her PhD in linguistics at Stanford University in 1989 with a dissertation, "Prosodic Constituency in the Lexicon," supervised by Paul Kiparsky.[2] In 1990, she arrived at UC Berkeley as a Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science research fellow and became a faculty member at Berkeley in 1992. She was a Hellman Fellow in 1995.[3] She was named the special faculty adviser to the chancellor on sexual violence/sexual harassment for a three-year term, beginning on July 24, 2017.[4]
Inkelas is noted for her work on phonology interfaces and particularly the interaction between morphology and phonology.[5] Her research interests include cophonology theory, reduplication, affix ordering, child phonology, and the analysis of Turkish.
Inkelas has long been actively involved in the Linguistic Society of America, serving on their executive committee from 2016-2018.[6][7] In 2020, Inkelas was inducted as a Fellow of the Linguistic Society of America.[8]
Inkelas is also a violinist: she played for the symphony orchestra of Stanford University and as of 2009[update] is a member of the symphony orchestra of the University of California, Davis .[9]
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