Tripti Joshi (Editor)

David Pesetsky

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Fields
  
Generative grammar

Role
  
Linguist

Name
  
David Pesetsky


Alma mater
  
MIT, Yale

Institutions
  
MIT, UMass Amherst

Doctoral advisor
  
Noam Chomsky

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Doctoral students
  
Karlos Arregi, Alya Asarina, Maria Babyonyshev, Judy Baek, Teal Bissell Doggett, Jonathan Bobaljik, Philip Branigan, Benjamin Bruening, Seth Cable, Jessica Coon, Viviane Deprez, Molly Diesing, Danny Fox, Martina Gracanin Yuksek, Paul Hagstrom, Claire Halpert, Jeremy Hartman, Alison Huettner, Shinichiro Ishihara, Yoshihisa Kitagawa, Heejeong Ko, Cornelia Krause, Ivona Kucerova, Kiyoshi Kurata, Idan Landau, Vivian Lin, Jon Nissenbaum, Omer Preminger, Norvin Richards, Joseph Sabbagh, Uli Sauerland, Daniel Seely, Kirill Shklovsky, Michiko Terada, Tue Trinh, Hubert Truckenbrodt, Iris Wu, Susanne Wurmbrand

Notable awards
  
Fellow of the AAAS, Fellow of the Linguistic Society of America

Education
  
Yale University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Books
  
Zero syntax, Phrasal Movement and Its Kin, Russian Case Morpholo

50 years of Linguistics at MIT, Welcome and Introduction


David Michael Pesetsky (born 1957) is an American linguist. He is the Ferrari P. Ward Professor of Modern Languages and Linguistics and Head of the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

David Pesetsky httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaendd1Dav

He received a B.A. in linguistics from Yale in 1977 and a Ph.D. in linguistics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1982. Pesetsky has taught at the University of Southern California and the University of Massachusetts Amherst before joining the faculty of MIT in 1988. Pesetsky was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2011, and a Fellow of the Linguistic Society of America in 2013.

He has published numerous articles and books within the framework of generative grammar. A specialist in syntax, he has published on the cross-linguistic properties of wh-movement as well as the theory of argument structure. In a collaboration with Esther Torrego, he developed a theory of grammatical case in noun phrases, arguing that nominative and accusative cases are the mirror image for the nominal system of phi feature agreement in the verbal system. He has worked extensively on the structure of Russian, and recently has argued (in collaboration with Jonah Katz) that the syntax of tonal music is identical to the structure of language.

In an article coauthored with Andrew Nevins and Cilene Rodrigues, Pesetsky criticized claims by Daniel Everett concerning the Pirahã language, touching off a protracted debate in the pages of the journal Language.

References

David Pesetsky Wikipedia