Andrey Zaliznyak

Andrey Zaliznyak

Andrey Anatolyevich Zaliznyak, (Russian: Андре́й Анато́льевич Зализня́к) (born April 29, 1935) is a Russian linguist, an expert in historical linguistics and grammar. It recent years he pays much attention to the popularizing of linguistics and struggle against pseudoscience.[1]

Biography

Zaliznyak was born in Moscow and studied in the Moscow University before moving to the Sorbonne to further his studies with André Martinet. He was admitted into the Soviet Academy of Sciences as a Corresponding Member in 1987. Ten years later, he was elected a full academician.

Zaliznyak's first monograph, Russian Nominal Inflection (1967), remains a definitive study in the field. Ten years later, he published a highly authoritative Russian Grammar Dictionary, which went through several reprints and provided a basis for Russian grammar software.

In 1982, Zaliznyak turned his interests towards the birch scrolls which have been unearthed in Novgorod since the 1950s. He has co-edited all publications of newly discovered birch scrolls since 1986. As the number of these ancient documents exceeded 700, Zaliznyak summed up his findings in the monograph Old Novgorod dialect (1995), which comprised the texts and comments of every birch scroll discovered. In particular, he demonstrated how the phonetics of the Old Novgorod dialect can be reconstructed from the typos in the birch scrolls.

In 2003, Zaliznyak published the first comprehensive study of the Novgorod Codex, the earliest extant East Slavic book, which had been sensationally discovered three years earlier.

In 2004, he published a study of the Tale of Igor's Campaign which examined all the significant linguistic arguments concernings its authenticity. Zaliznyak contends that no 20th-century (let alone 18th-century) forger could have reproduced the grammatical subtleties of the 12th-century Old East Slavic language.

As of 2005, Zaliznyak lectures in the Moscow University, University of Geneva, and University of Paris. For more data on his work, see Old Novgorod dialect, Novgorod Codex, and the Tale of Igor's Campaign.

Honors

Major works

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References


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