Name Christina Kramer | ||
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Books Macedonian: A Course for Beginning and Intermediate Students, Macedonian, Analytic Modality in Macedonian |
Christina kramer professor of macedonian language at the university of toronto
Christina Elizabeth Kramer is Professor of Slavic and Balkan languages and linguistics at the University of Toronto and Chair of the university's Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures which is part of the Faculty of Arts and Science.
Contents
- Christina kramer professor of macedonian language at the university of toronto
- Christina kramer kinderzimmerdieb kiddy contest vol 01
- Education
- Publications
- Translations
- Awards
- References

Kramer authored Macedonian: A Course for Beginning and Intermediate Students. The book – first published in 1999, revised and expanded second edition published in 2003 – is the most recent English Macedonian textbook.
She is a specialist on Balkan languages and semantics, specifically on South Slavic languages. Her research focus on synchronic linguistics, sociolinguistics, verbal categories, language and politics. She teaches courses in Russian and Macedonian language and others.
Christina kramer kinderzimmerdieb kiddy contest vol 01
Education
Kramer worked as a translator for Berlitz Translation Service for some time, translating documents from Bulgarian, Macedonian, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, and Turkish.
Since 1986 Kramer has been a member of the University of Toronto faculty. Professor Kramer was promoted to full professor in May 2001.
Publications
Translations
Christina E. Kramer's translations of several Bulgarian and Macedonian novels (by Luan Starova, Goce Smilevski, and Aleko Konstantinov) have been published by the University of Wisconsin Press and Penguin Books.
Awards
Kramer received the 2006 Book Award from the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and Eastern European Languages for best contribution to language pedagogy for her book Macedonian: A Course for Beginning and Intermediate Students. She received the prize on December 28, 2006 during the association's annual meeting in Philadelphia.