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James Berry

BIO

James Berry earned his BA in English at the University of Florida, and his MA and PhD in English Linguistics at Arizona State University, where his academic interests included generative syntax, language change, sociolinguistics, pragmatics, and language contact.

Berry’s current research is primarily focused on the rise of sentence adverbs in the history of English (and other languages such as Mandarin Chinese), with a particular concentration on the use of certain sentence adverbs as secondary predicates with pragmatic meaning. Other current research interests include discourse, onomastics, and stylistics.​

He said students who take classes in the UWSP English Department are supported in their educational journeys by a wonderful group of kind and brilliant faculty and staff. Students are provided a wide range of experiences, from literary studies to writing and linguistics, and from education to publishing.

RESEARCH INTERESTS

  • Historical Morphosyntax
  • Generative Grammar
  • Sociolinguistics
  • Pragmatics and discourse analysis
  • Invented languages
  • Linguistics pedagogy

PUBLICATIONs

Berry, J. A. (2018). A generative approach to lexicalization: Speech-act ‘frankly’ in the history of English. WORD. 64(3), 135-156. https://doi.org/10.1080/00437956.2018.1490422

QUOTE

“Only connect.” – E.M. Forster

LAST BOOK READ

“Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language” by Gretchen McCulloch

ADVICE

Finished is better than perfect.

Associate Professor of English
Language Study Interdisciplinary Certificate Coordinator
UWSP Summer ESL Program Coordinator

Office:
CCC 441
Phone:
715-346-4757

Education

Ph.D. - English (Linguistics)
Arizona State University

M.A. - English
Arizona State University

B.A. - English
University of Florida

Courses

English Grammars
English Language for Teachers
Modern Short Story
Reading Fiction