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- American_linguistics abstract "For the study of American languages, see Indigenous languages of the Americas.The history of linguistics in the United States begins with William Dwight Whitney, the first U.S.-taught academic linguist, who founded the American Philological Association in 1869.Leonard Bloomfield (1878–1949), professor at the University of Chicago from 1921, founded the Linguistic Society of America in 1924. Other linguists active in the first half of the 20th century include Edward Sapir and Benjamin Whorf.From the 1950s, American linguistic tradition began to diverge from the de Saussurian structuralism taught in European academia, notably with Noam Chomsky's \"nativist\" transformational grammar and successor theories, which during the 1970s \"linguistics wars\" gave rise to a wide variety of competing grammar frameworks.American linguistics outside the Chomskyan tradition includes functional grammar with proponents including Talmy Givón, and cognitive grammar advocated by Ronald Langacker and others.Linguistic typology, and controversially mass lexical comparison, was considered by Joseph Greenberg.Historical linguistics, especially Indo-European studies, is taught widely in the United States.".
- American_linguistics wikiPageID "13809797".
- American_linguistics wikiPageLength "1596".
- American_linguistics wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- American_linguistics wikiPageRevisionID "706720703".
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink American_Association_for_Applied_Linguistics.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Benjamin_Lee_Whorf.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_linguists.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Cognitive_grammar.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Sapir.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Ferdinand_de_Saussure.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Functional_theories_of_grammar.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Historical_linguistics.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink History_of_linguistics.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Indigenous_languages_of_the_Americas.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Indo-European_studies.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Greenberg.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Leonard_Bloomfield.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Linguistic_Society_of_America.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Linguistic_typology.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Linguistics_Wars.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Mass_comparison.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Noam_Chomsky.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink North_American_Chapter_of_the_Association_for_Computational_Linguistics.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Psychological_nativism.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Ronald_Langacker.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink SIL_International.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Society_for_Classical_Studies.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Structuralism.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Syntax.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Givon.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink Transformational_grammar.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Chicago.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLink William_Dwight_Whitney.
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLinkText "American linguist".
- American_linguistics wikiPageWikiLinkText "American linguistics".
- American_linguistics wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Linguistics-stub.
- American_linguistics subject Category:American_linguists.
- American_linguistics type Linguist.
- American_linguistics type Scientist.
- American_linguistics type Linguist.
- American_linguistics type Scientist.
- American_linguistics comment "For the study of American languages, see Indigenous languages of the Americas.The history of linguistics in the United States begins with William Dwight Whitney, the first U.S.-taught academic linguist, who founded the American Philological Association in 1869.Leonard Bloomfield (1878–1949), professor at the University of Chicago from 1921, founded the Linguistic Society of America in 1924.".
- American_linguistics label "American linguistics".
- American_linguistics sameAs Q4745494.
- American_linguistics sameAs m.03cjxdf.
- American_linguistics sameAs Q4745494.
- American_linguistics wasDerivedFrom American_linguistics?oldid=706720703.
- American_linguistics isPrimaryTopicOf American_linguistics.