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Harry Hoijer

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Name
  
Harry Hoijer

Role
  
Anthropologist


Education
  
University of Chicago

Academic advisor
  
Edward Sapir

Harry Hoijer imagesmediawikisitesthefullwikiorg1094194

Died
  
March 11, 1976, Santa Monica, California, United States

Books
  
Tonkawa, an Indian Language of Texas

Similar People
  
Ralph Leon Beals, Edward Sapir, Leonard Bloomfield, Melville J Herskovits, Walter Goldschmidt

Harry Hoijer (September 6, 1904 – March 11, 1976) was a linguist and anthropologist who worked on primarily Athabaskan languages and culture. He additionally documented the Tonkawa language, which is now extinct. Hoijer's few works make up the bulk of material on this language. Hoijer was a student of Edward Sapir.

Hoijer contributed greatly to the documentation of the Southern and Pacific Coast Athabaskan languages and to the reconstruction of proto-Athabaskan. Harry Hoijer collected a large number of valuable fieldnotes on many Athabaskan languages, which are unpublished. Some of his notes on Lipan Apache and the Tonkawa language are lost.

Hoijer coined the term "Sapir–Whorf hypothesis".

References

Harry Hoijer Wikipedia