|
Steven L. Franks is Professor Emeritus of Linguistics and of Slavic and East European Languages and Cultures at Indiana University, Bloomington, and holds degrees from Princeton, UCLA, and Cornell. Franks is the author of
Parameters of Slavic Morphosyntax
(1995),
Syntax and Spell-Out in Slavic
(2017), and
Microvariation in the South Slavic Noun Phrase
(2020), and is a co-author of
A Handbook of Slavic Clitics
(2000) and
Polish
(2002). He has published over 100 articles and co-edited a dozen volumes; in addition, he is one of the founders of the Slavic Linguistics Society and of the
Journal of Slavic Linguistics
.
Alan H. Timberlake has taught at UCLA, the University of California at Berkeley, and Columbia University. He is the author of
The Nominative Object in Slavic, Baltic, and West Finnic
(1974) and
A Reference Grammar of Russian
(2004). He does research on various aspects of Slavic linguistics and cultures (phonology, syntax, geography, sacred texts).
Anna W. Wietecka holds degrees in philology and German studies from the Samuel-Bogumi¿-Linde-College of Higher Education in Poznä, Poland, and in foreign languages from the University of Potsdam, Germany. She is a research assistant and doctoral student at the chair of Slavic Linguistics, Department of Slavic languages and literatures, University of Potsdam. Her main areas of teaching and research are in language acquisition, Polish and German syntax, bilingualism, and multilingualism.
|