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Research
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The research
interests of Robert Mailhammer focus on language documentation ,
language change, language contact
and language variation. In 2007 he published a
book on the morphological foundations of the Germanic strong
verbs with Mouton de Gruyter, as well as papers in refereed
journals and volumes on their development in German and English.
In addition, he has worked on the prehistory of Proto-Germanic
and the other languages of Europe and has advanced etymological
proposals for hitherto unexplained Germanic vocabulary. Besides
morphology, Robert Mailhammer has also undertaken research in historical
English phonology and language contact phenomena
in Modern Standard German. He is currently
working on Amurdak, a non-Pama-Nyungan language
from Northern Arnhem Land, Australia. The main objectives of this
project are to promote the synchronic grammatical understanding
of this nearly completely extinct language, as well as to transcribe and to translate existing language recordings. So far this has led to new insights into the grammatical system of Amurdak as well as a book with Amurdak stories due to be pubished in 2009. The project is linked with other projects and research on languages in Northern Arnhem Land and also aims at comparative and historical research. Planned publications include a grammar as well as the edition of an existing draft dictionary.
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