| Brett Baker |
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| Senior Lecturer in Linguistics | ||
| School of Behavioural, Cognitive and Social Sciences |
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| University of New England, NSW 2351 Australia |
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| Ph: +61 2 6773 3220; Fx: +61 2 6773 3748 |
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| To contact me via electronic mail, use my first name followed by my second name and separated by a dot, then the 'at' symbol then une dot edu dot au. (Because of copious amounts of unreadable Korean spam I've been forced to resort to this. Thanks a lot guys.) |
Downloadable papers: |
| Morphology/phonology
Referentiality
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I live in Armidale NSW with my wife Karan and our son Louie (born October 8th, 2004). Since February 2002 I've been teaching in the Linguistics discipline in the School of Behavioral, Cognitive and Social Sciences (Linguistics was formerly part of the School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics—now defunct), University of New England. Units I have taught: LING100/101/102/450 (introductory first year units), LING306 and LING464 First language acquisition, LING307 Second language acquisition, LING313 Language description, LING330 Language in multilingual societies, LING360/460 Generative Syntax, LING368/468 Formal Phonology. |
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In 1999 I completed my PhD entitled Word Structure in Ngalakgan, at the Dept of Linguistics, University of Sydney. The thesis is a study of morphology, phonology, and prosody in Ngalakgan, and the interactions between the three of these. Ngalakgan is an indigenous Australian language, spoken by a handful of people in Arnhem Land, in the Northern Territory (see map ). |
Coverbs and complex predicates I began this ARC-funded project in 2005 in collaboration with Mengistu Amberber (UNSW) and Mark Harvey (Newcastle). In 2006 we held a workshop in conjunction with the annual Australian Linguistics Society conference. |
Referentiality in Australian languages This is a issue which has concerned me for a long time but I'm only now starting to understand the theory behind the questions. For my preliminary ideas on this topic, see the papers above. I am primarily investigating these issues in the Non-Pama-Nyungan languages Wubuy (a.k.a. Nunggubuyu) and Marra (a.k.a. Mara). See map, below, for locations. |
Research on Discourse and Definiteness The Australian Linguistic Society annual conference 2007 hosted a workshop on 'Definiteness'. |
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Audio-text linking online This is a continuation of my postdoctoral fellowship at Sydney University, awarded in 1999 under the Australian Research Council's 'Strategic Partnerships with Industry, Research and Training' (SPIRT) scheme. The project was called 'Indigenous spoken interaction — research and application'. My industry partner was Diwurruwurru-jaru Aboriginal Corporation (DAC; the Katherine Language Centre), with whom I've had a long and productive association. The project aims to take an electronic approach to the issue of how best to present and archive indigenous language so that the focus is less on the written word, and more on spoken, interactive material. To this end, I have been working with speakers of indigenous languages in the Roper River area collecting interactive material (dialogues, collaborative discussions and stories, traditional uses for plants and animals, arguments, gossip) with the aim of creating an electronic audio archive which can be accessed through a database including dictionary and text components. |
This tool ideally can be used both as a language archive, to store language material for future use, and as a resource for teaching indigenous languages in schools. In its involvement with language teaching in schools, DAC has continually run into the problem of low literacy abilities among the (usually elderly) people who volunteer as language experts in the classroom. The archive, with its emphasis on audio material, aims to alleviate this problem, without providing necessarily the best answer. The 'research' component of this project will focus on the formal and referential characteristics of interactive language, an area which is still poorly represented in the linguistics literature on Australian languages. |
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Go to: thesis, further reading, other links, back to the top. |

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Go to: current work, thesis, bedtime reading, other links, back to the top. |
Last updated: 15-May-2008. Comments to my address above.