Mikołaj Kruszewski

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Mikołaj Habdank Kruszewski, (Russianized, Nikolay Vyacheslavovich Krushevsky, Николай Вячеславович Крушевский) (1851–1887) was a Polish linguist, most significant as the co-inventor of the concept of phonemes. From 1883, he was a professor at Kazan University. His notable works include On Sound Alternation (1881) and Outline of Linguistic Science (1883).

A student of Jan Baudouin de Courtenay (1845–1929), Kruszewski worked with de Courtenay to develop the linguistics associated with the Kazan school. These inspired other linguists. Since it is difficult to distinguish who created which concept, the systematic treatment of alternation may be attributed to both.

[edit] Education

Kruszewski studied in the historical-philological faculty in Warsaw, teaching the Russian language to support himself. Desiring broader experience, he went to Kazan, where he met de Courtenay. He was a hard-working and ambitious student. He became full professor in Kazan in 1885, aged 34, after having prepared two theses. Unfortunately his brilliant career was dramatically cut off by a grave neurological and mental illness; he was to retire the same year and died in 1887.

[edit] Works

Kruszewski's major work was in the theory of alternations. He was the first to create a systematic approach to the phonological structure of language. He spent much of his time analyzing the sounds of language, mainly the concept of the phoneme, which was understood as an abstract element of language consisting of various distinctive features. Above all, however, Kruszewski was preoccupied with classifying the alternations and describing their status.

Kruszewski proposed three types of alternations and stressed the fact that each alternation is influenced by two important factors. The first factor involves the changes sounds undergo within themselves, while the second involves the conditions that stimulate a given change. Such an approach results in the classification of alternations into three major groups.

The first category of alternations is restricted to the sounds that are very similar. Alternations that belong to this category are governed by four rules:

  • The cause of the alternation is determinate
  • The alternation is general
  • The alternation has no exceptions
  • Alternations occur among sounds that do not differ markedly in phonetic properties.

An example of the first type are those variations between particular sounds in Russian as a function of the palatalization of the preceding consonant.

The alternations that represent the second and third categories are quite similar and there are three important conditions under which the alternations take place:

  • The cause of the alternation may be absent
  • The alternation may have exceptions
  • Alternations occur among sounds that differ markedly in phonetic properties.

The sounds involved in alternations of the sounds of the second and the third category are known as correlatives. The only difference between the second and the third category is the degree to which a given category is morphologized. Kruszewski's example for the second category is u-umlaut in Icelandic. He does not strictly separate the second and the third category.

This classification is an important framework that presents one of many ways of perceiving a language.

[edit] References

  • Anderson, S.R., 1985. Phonology in the Twentieth Century. Chicago, The University of Chicago.
  • Fisiak, J., 1978. Wstęp do współczesnych teorii lingwistycznych. Warszawa, Wydawnictwo Szkolne i Pedagogiczne.


Persondata
NAME Kruszewski, Mikołaj
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION linguist
DATE OF BIRTH December 18, 1851
PLACE OF BIRTH Lutsk
DATE OF DEATH November 12, 1887
PLACE OF DEATH Kazan