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Dr Aashild Naess

Work Phone(02) 4921 5890
Email
PositionLecturer
School of Humanities and Social Science
The University of Newcastle, Australia
OfficeMC112, McMullin Building

Biography

I completed an MA in linguistics at the University of Oslo in 1998; my MA thesis was a sketch grammar of a previously undescribed Polynesian language of the Solomon Islands. I then went on to do a PhD in linguistics at the University of Nijmegen, completed 2004; a revised version of my dissertation was published under the title "Prototypical Transitivity" by John Benjamins in 2007. I have since held postdoctoral positions at the University of Oslo and the University of Nijmegen, and a Visiting Professorship at the University of Zürich. I have been employed as Lecturer in Linguistics at the University of Newcastle since January 2012.

Qualifications


Research

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Research expertise

I specialise in linguistic typology and language documentation/description. In typology, my main research interest have so far been in the notion of transitivity as a crosslinguistic category, and in the crosslinguistic properties of case marking; most recently on how case-marking is linked to the marking of pragmatic properties in language. I have also published research on verb serialisation and complex verb forms, and on how these are linked to the conceptualisation of complex events.

I have done linguistic fieldwork on two languages spoken in the eastern Solomon Islands, Vaeakau-Taumako (Pileni) and Äiwoo. In 2011 I published a reference grammar of Vaeakau-Taumako, co-authored with Even Hovdhaugen. My work on Äiwoo was instrumental in resolving a decades-long debate about the origin of the so-called Reefs-Santa Cruz languages; they are now generally accepted to belong to the Oceanic subgroup of the Austronesian language family. I have also studied the language-contact situation between Äiwoo and Vaeakau-Taumako, and the mechanisms through which lexical and structural borrowing has taken place between these languages.

Collaboration

I am an affiliated partner with the research project "“Evolution of Semantic Systems” at the Max Planck Institute of Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen.

I maintain informal collaborative links with a number of colleagues at various institutions, including the Australian National University, the University of Oslo, the University of Zürich, and the LACITO research centre in Paris.

Languages

Memberships

Body relevant to professional practice.

Editorial Board.


Teaching

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