Phoevos Panagiotidis
He read Philology (majoring in Linguistics) at the University of Athens (1995) and graduated with an MA in Linguistics from UCL in 1997. In 2000 he was awarded a PhD in Linguistics for his thesis “Pronominals and empty noun heads: ‘pronominality’ and licensing in Syntax” by the University of Essex, published as a monograph in 2002 by John Benjamins.
From 2000 to 2002 he taught Developmental Linguistics and Psycholinguistics in Middlesex University and Birkbeck College (University of London), as well as English Linguistics for the Open University. In 2002 he moved to Cyprus and worked as Assistant Professor of Linguistics in the Department of Humanities at Cyprus College – of which he served as Chair between 2005 and 2007. In 2006 he organised the 'Edges in Syntax' conference, part one of the Cyprus Syntaxfest. In 2007 he joined the Department of English Studies at the University of Cyprus as Assistant Professor of Linguistics. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2012.
He has presented over 150 papers and talks and has published extensively in journals (Linguistic Inquiry, Lingua, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, Syntax, Studia Linguistica, Journal of Linguistics, The Linguistic Review and elsewhere) and jointly authored volumes. He has written on issues in language and Linguistics in Greek language newspapers since 2006.
He is the editor of 'Complementizer Phase: subjects and operators', published in 2010 by Oxford University Press. His popular science book ) "Μίλα μου για γλώσσα. Από την επιστήμη της γλώσσας: θέματα γλώσσας, γλωσσικά προβλήματα [Talk to me about language. Linguistic science: language issues, language problems]" will appear in 2013 from Crete University Press. His monograph "Categorial Features: a generative theory of word class categories" was published in 2015 from Cambridge University Press.
Address: Dept. of English Studies
University of Cyprus
Kallipoleos 75
PO Box 20537
1678 Nicosia
CYPRUS
From 2000 to 2002 he taught Developmental Linguistics and Psycholinguistics in Middlesex University and Birkbeck College (University of London), as well as English Linguistics for the Open University. In 2002 he moved to Cyprus and worked as Assistant Professor of Linguistics in the Department of Humanities at Cyprus College – of which he served as Chair between 2005 and 2007. In 2006 he organised the 'Edges in Syntax' conference, part one of the Cyprus Syntaxfest. In 2007 he joined the Department of English Studies at the University of Cyprus as Assistant Professor of Linguistics. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2012.
He has presented over 150 papers and talks and has published extensively in journals (Linguistic Inquiry, Lingua, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, Syntax, Studia Linguistica, Journal of Linguistics, The Linguistic Review and elsewhere) and jointly authored volumes. He has written on issues in language and Linguistics in Greek language newspapers since 2006.
He is the editor of 'Complementizer Phase: subjects and operators', published in 2010 by Oxford University Press. His popular science book ) "Μίλα μου για γλώσσα. Από την επιστήμη της γλώσσας: θέματα γλώσσας, γλωσσικά προβλήματα [Talk to me about language. Linguistic science: language issues, language problems]" will appear in 2013 from Crete University Press. His monograph "Categorial Features: a generative theory of word class categories" was published in 2015 from Cambridge University Press.
Address: Dept. of English Studies
University of Cyprus
Kallipoleos 75
PO Box 20537
1678 Nicosia
CYPRUS
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Books by Phoevos Panagiotidis
In Chapter 1 the questions and analyses regarding parts of speech are introduced; Chapter 2 discusses the recurring question of the universality of categories Noun, Verb, Adjective and Adposition. Chapter 3 introduces syntactic decomposition and how it applies on categories and categorisation, also including types of conversion. Chapter 4 presents the theory itself; Chapter 5 applies the theory on functional elements, arguing them to bear uninterpretable versions of categorial features; Chapter 6 explains how the above apply on mixed projections, capturing their dual nature. Chapter 7 concludes the book.
"This important compilation advances our knowledge of the intricate phenomena that take place on the edges of clauses. Every one of the contributions is thought-provoking and challenging, a property that would make the volume an ideal text for a graduate seminar in syntactic theory."
Frederick J. Newmeyer
Professor Emeritus, University of Washington and Adjunct Professor, University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University
Papers by Phoevos Panagiotidis
In Chapter 1 the questions and analyses regarding parts of speech are introduced; Chapter 2 discusses the recurring question of the universality of categories Noun, Verb, Adjective and Adposition. Chapter 3 introduces syntactic decomposition and how it applies on categories and categorisation, also including types of conversion. Chapter 4 presents the theory itself; Chapter 5 applies the theory on functional elements, arguing them to bear uninterpretable versions of categorial features; Chapter 6 explains how the above apply on mixed projections, capturing their dual nature. Chapter 7 concludes the book.
"This important compilation advances our knowledge of the intricate phenomena that take place on the edges of clauses. Every one of the contributions is thought-provoking and challenging, a property that would make the volume an ideal text for a graduate seminar in syntactic theory."
Frederick J. Newmeyer
Professor Emeritus, University of Washington and Adjunct Professor, University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University