About my work

I am a syntactician with a primary focus on crosslinguistic variation, particulary with respect to noun phrases, and the interface of syntax with semantics and phonology. In the syntax-semantics interface, I'm particularly interested in definiteness, quantification, and relative clauses. My work on the syntax-phonology interface examines how theories of morpho-syntactic structures can inform our understanding of domains in which phonological processes apply. I teach courses on syntax, semantics, typology, and fieldwork.

My work focuses on languages of East and Southeast Asia and Subsaharan Africa. (I like working on languages with tone!) I have an enduring interest in Thai, which I grew up speaking as a second language and which was the topic of my dissertation.

I have also worked for several years on Moro, an endangered Kordofanian language spoken in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan. I co-developed the Moro Story Corpus; a descriptive grammar of Moro is to appear with Language Sciences Press, coauthored with Sharon Rose and our Moro colleagues.

Publications

To appear

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

2015

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

Teaching

2023-2024

2022-2023

2021-2022

Advising

I have had the good fortune to work with the following students, whose interests, like mind, tend to center on generative syntax and theoretically-informed fieldwork. Students with research interests in these areas, particularly those investigating formal syntax, the syntax-semantics interface, morphology, or the syntax-phonology interface, with strong training in these areas and a clear research trajectory are encouraged to contact me to inquire about our PhD program.

Current PhD students

Dissertation committees ((co-)chaired)

Dissertation committees (as committee member)