Robert A. Hall, Jr.

This article is about the linguist. For the Massachusetts state senator, see Robert A. Hall.

Robert Anderson Hall, Jr. (1911–1997) was an American linguist and specialist in the Romance languages. He was a professor of Linguistics at Cornell University and the first president of The Wodehouse Society (US).

Hall was an early promoter of the linguistics of Creole languages, and published broadly within the field. Under the auspices of the United States Armed Services Institute, he wrote a structuralist description of Melanesian Pidgin English in 1943.[1] Among other creoles and pidgin languages, he studied Sranan of Surinam and Haitian Creole.

Hall organized the successful spoken language learning method for soldiers in the Second World War.

Hall criticized Basic English because it encouraged the use of multi-meaning words (such as get) under the guise of simplicity.

Hall took the controversial view that the Kensington Runestone, a purported relic of an early Viking visit to what is now Minnesota in North America, was authentic.

Criticisms of Generative Linguistics

Hall was an outspoken critic of the Generative tradition of Linguistics emanating from Noam Chomsky, for example remarking that "Chomskyan transformationalism rejects a scientific approach for an anti-scientific one." [2]

Partial bibliography

References

  1. Holm, John A. (2000). An introduction to pidgins and creoles. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-58581-3.
  2. American Linguistics: 1925-1969. Three essays with a Preface to the Reprint. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft (1976), p. 91
  3. Hall, Robert A. (1973). New ways to learn a foreign language. Ithaca, N.Y: Spoken Language Services. ISBN 0-87950-293-2.

External links


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