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'''Ernst Pulgram''' (September 18, 1915 – August 17, 2005) was an [[United States|American]] [[linguist]] of [[Austria]]n origins whose main interest lay in the [[Italic languages|Italic]] and [[Romance languages]].
'''Ernst Pulgram''' (September 18, 1915 – August 17, 2005) was an [[United States|American]] [[linguist]] of [[Austria]]n origins whose main interest lay in the [[Italic languages|Italic]] and [[Romance languages]]. He is survived by his wife, linguist Frances McSparran.


Born and educated in [[Vienna]], he was forced to leave shortly after the [[Anschluss]] to escape from the Nazis. He moved to the United States and joined the US army to fight in WWII. Because he left Vienna last minute, shortly before his PhD defence, he started a new PhD in Michigan under the [[G.I. Bill]]. After graduation, he spent most of his career (1948–1986) at the [[University of Michigan]]. Throughout his life he maintained ties to his Austrian homeland, which included in later years the Viennese linguists, e.g. historical English linguist [[Herbert Schendl]].
Born and educated in [[Vienna]], he was forced to leave shortly after the [[Anschluss]] to escape from the Nazis. He moved to the United States and joined the US army to fight in WWII. Because he left Vienna last minute, shortly before his PhD defence, he started a new PhD in Michigan under the [[G.I. Bill]]. After graduation, he spent most of his career (1948–1986) at the [[University of Michigan]]. Throughout his life he maintained ties to his Austrian homeland, which included in later years the Viennese linguists, e.g. historical English linguist [[Herbert Schendl]].

Revision as of 00:31, 19 February 2018

Ernst Pulgram (September 18, 1915 – August 17, 2005) was an American linguist of Austrian origins whose main interest lay in the Italic and Romance languages. He is survived by his wife, linguist Frances McSparran.

Born and educated in Vienna, he was forced to leave shortly after the Anschluss to escape from the Nazis. He moved to the United States and joined the US army to fight in WWII. Because he left Vienna last minute, shortly before his PhD defence, he started a new PhD in Michigan under the G.I. Bill. After graduation, he spent most of his career (1948–1986) at the University of Michigan. Throughout his life he maintained ties to his Austrian homeland, which included in later years the Viennese linguists, e.g. historical English linguist Herbert Schendl.

Bibliography

  • The Tongues of Italy, Prehistory and History
  • Latin-romance phonology: Prosodics and metrics (Ars grammatica)
  • Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching
  • Italic, Latin, Italian: 600 B.C. to A.D. 1260 : texts and commentaries; (Indogermanische Bibliothek. Reihe 1, Lehr und Handbücher)
  • Practicing linguist: Essays on language and languages, 1950-1985