- Denny Moore
-
Denny Moore is an American linguist, and anthropologist.
He graduated from the University of Michigan, and from the City University of New York with a Ph.D. in Anthropology.[1] He has worked for the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development,[2] and is Coordinator of the Linguistics Division, Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi, Belem-Para, Brazil.[3] He published a grammar of Gavião, a Brazilian Amazonian language.[4][5] He is on the advisory board of the Center for Amazon Community Ecology.[6]
Contents
Awards
Works
- "Endangered Languages of Lowland Tropical South America", Language diversity endangered, Editor Matthias Brenzinger, Walter de Gruyter, 2007 ISBN 978-3-11-017050-4
References
- ^ http://web.gc.cuny.edu/Anthropology/docs/geniusfactory.pdf
- ^ http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/Endangered_Lang_Conf/Moore.html
- ^ http://www.ogmios.org/ogmios_files/123.htm
- ^ http://www.brazilmax.com/news.cfm/tborigem/pl_amazon/id/13
- ^ http://www.terralingua.org/2/OrgsAmericas.html
- ^ http://www.amazonecology.org/aboutus/who.html
External links
- "Can You Sleep in a Hammock? And a Few Other Questions that Never Came up in Field Methods Class", Colorado Research in Linguistics, June 2004, Kristine Stenzel
- After the trees: living on the Transamazon Highway, Douglas Ian Stewart, University of Texas Press, 1994, ISBN 978-0-292-77680-7
Categories:- American linguists
- University of Michigan alumni
- City University of New York alumni
- MacArthur Fellows
- Living people
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.