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Leonard Bloomfield

Leonard Bloomfield (April 1, 1887 – April 18, 1949) was an American linguist who led the development of structural linguistics in the United States during the 1930s and the 1940s. He is considered to be the father of American distributionalism.[1][2] His influential textbook Language, published in 1933, presented a comprehensive description of American structural linguistics.[3] He made significant contributions to Indo-European historical linguistics, the description of Austronesian languages, and description of languages of the Algonquian family.

Leonard Bloomfield
Born(1887-04-01)April 1, 1887
DiedApril 18, 1949(1949-04-18) (aged 62)
Alma materHarvard College, University of Wisconsin, University of Chicago, University of Leipzig, University of Göttingen
SpouseAlice Sayers
Scientific career
FieldsLinguistics, Ethnolinguistics
InstitutionsUniversity of Cincinnati, University of Illinois, Ohio State University, University of Chicago, Yale University

Bloomfield's approach to linguistics was characterized by its emphasis on the scientific basis of linguistics and emphasis on formal procedures for the analysis of linguistic data.[4] The influence of Bloomfieldian structural linguistics declined in the late 1950s and 1960s as the theory of generative grammar developed by Noam Chomsky came to predominate.[5]

Early life and education edit

Bloomfield was born in Chicago, Illinois, on April 1, 1887, to Jewish parents (Sigmund Bloomfield and Carola Buber Bloomfield). His father immigrated to the United States as a child in 1868; the original family name Blumenfeld was changed to Bloomfield after their arrival.[6] In 1896 his family moved to Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, where he attended elementary school, but returned to Chicago for secondary school.[7] His uncle Maurice Bloomfield was a prominent linguist at Johns Hopkins University,[8][9] and his aunt Fannie Bloomfield Zeisler was a well-known concert pianist.[8]

Bloomfield attended Harvard College from 1903 to 1906, graduating with the A.B. degree.[9] He subsequently began graduate work at the University of Wisconsin, taking courses in German and Germanic philology, in addition to courses in other Indo-European languages.[10] A meeting with Indo-Europeanist Eduard Prokosch, a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin, convinced Bloomfield to pursue a career in linguistics.[9] In 1908 Bloomfield moved to the University of Chicago, where he took courses in German and Indo-European philology with Frances A. Wood and Carl Darling Buck. His doctoral dissertation in Germanic historical linguistics, A semasiologic differentiation in Germanic secondary ablaut, was supervised by Wood, and he graduated in 1909.

He undertook further studies at the University of Leipzig and the University of Göttingen in 1913 and 1914 with leading Indo-Europeanists August Leskien, Karl Brugmann, as well as Hermann Oldenberg, a specialist in Vedic Sanskrit. Bloomfield also studied at Göttingen with Sanskrit specialist Jacob Wackernagel, and considered both Wackernagel and the Sanskrit grammatical tradition of rigorous grammatical analysis associated with Pāṇini as important influences on both his historical and descriptive work.[11][12] Further training in Europe was a condition for promotion at the University of Illinois from Instructor to the rank of assistant professor.[13]

Career edit

Bloomfield was instructor in German at the University of Cincinnati, 1909–1910; Instructor in German at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, 1910–1913; promoted to Assistant Professor of Comparative Philology and German, also University of Illinois, 1913–1921; Professor of German and Linguistics at the Ohio State University, 1921–1927; Professor of Germanic Philology at the University of Chicago, 1927–1940; Sterling Professor of Linguistics at Yale University, 1940–1949. During the summer of 1925 Bloomfield worked as Assistant Ethnologist with the Geological Survey of Canada in the Canadian Department of Mines, undertaking linguistic field work on Plains Cree; this position was arranged by Edward Sapir, who was then Chief of the Division of Anthropology, Victoria Museum, Geological Survey of Canada, Canadian Department of Mines.[14][15] In May 1946, he suffered a debilitating stroke, which ended his career.[16]

Bloomfield was one of the founding members of the Linguistic Society of America. In 1924, along with George M. Bolling (Ohio State University) and Edgar Sturtevant (Yale University) he formed a committee to organize the creation of the Society, and drafted the call for the Society's foundation.[17][18] He contributed the lead article to the inaugural issue of the Society's journal Language,[19] and was President of the Society in 1935.[20] He taught in the Society's summer Linguistic Institute in 1938–1941, with the 1938–1940 Institutes being held in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and the 1941 Institute in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.[21] Bloomfield was also a member of the American Philosophical Society.[22]

Indo-European linguistics edit

Bloomfield's earliest work was in historical Germanic studies, beginning with his dissertation, and continuing with a number of papers on Indo-European and Germanic phonology and morphology.[23][24] His post-doctoral studies in Germany further strengthened his expertise in the Neogrammarian tradition, which still dominated Indo-European historical studies.[25] Bloomfield throughout his career, but particularly during his early career, emphasized the Neogrammarian principle of regular sound change as a foundational concept in historical linguistics.[19][26]

Bloomfield's work in Indo-European beyond his dissertation was limited to an article on palatal consonants in Sanskrit[27] and one article on the Sanskrit grammatical tradition associated with Pāṇini,[28] in addition to a number of book reviews. Bloomfield made extensive use of Indo-European materials to explain historical and comparative principles in both of his textbooks, An introduction to language (1914), and his seminal Language (1933).[29] In his textbooks he selected Indo-European examples that supported the key Neogrammarian hypothesis of the regularity of sound change, and emphasized a sequence of steps essential to success in comparative work: (a) appropriate data in the form of texts which must be studied intensively and analysed; (b) application of the comparative method; (c) reconstruction of proto-forms.[29] He further emphasized the importance of dialect studies where appropriate, and noted the significance of sociological factors such as prestige, and the impact of meaning.[30] In addition to regular linguistic change, Bloomfield also allowed for borrowing and analogy.[31]

It is argued that Bloomfield's Indo-European work had two broad implications: "He stated clearly the theoretical bases for Indo-European linguistics" and "he established the study of Indo-European languages firmly within general linguistics."[32]

Sanskrit studies edit

As part of his training with leading Indo-Europeanists in Germany in 1913 and 1914 Bloomfield studied the Sanskrit grammatical tradition originating with Pāṇini, who lived in northwestern India during the fifth or fourth century BC.[33] Pāṇini's grammar is characterized by its extreme thoroughness and explicitness in accounting for Sanskrit linguistic forms, and by its complex context-sensitive, rule-based generative structure. Bloomfield noted that "Pāṇini gives the formation of every inflected, compounded, or derived word, with an exact statement of the sound-variations (including accent) and of the meaning".[34] In a letter to Algonquianist Truman Michelson, Bloomfield noted "My models are Pāṇini and the kind of work done in Indo-European by my teacher, Professor Wackernagel of Basle."[35]

Pāṇini's systematic approach to analysis includes components for: (a) forming grammatical rules, (b) an inventory of sounds, (c) a list of verbal roots organized into sublists, and (d) a list of classes of morphs.[36] Bloomfield's approach to key linguistic ideas in his textbook Language reflect the influence of Pāṇini in his treatment of basic concepts such as linguistic form, free form, and others. Similarly, Pāṇini is the source for Bloomfield's use of the terms exocentric and endocentric used to describe compound words.[37][38] Concepts from Pāṇini are found in Eastern Ojibwa, published posthumously in 1958, in particular his use of the concept of a morphological zero, a morpheme that has no overt realization.[39] Pāṇini's influence is also present in Bloomfield's approach to determining parts of speech (Bloomfield uses the term "form-classes") in both Eastern Ojibwa and in the later Menomini language, published posthumously in 1962.[40]

Austronesian linguistics edit

While at the University of Illinois Bloomfield undertook research on Tagalog, an Austronesian language spoken in the Philippines. He carried out linguistic field work with Alfredo Viola Santiago, who was an engineering student at the university from 1914 to 1917. The results were published as Tagalog texts with grammatical analysis, which includes a series of texts dictated by Santiago in addition to an extensive grammatical description and analysis of every word in the texts.[41] Bloomfield's work on Tagalog, from the beginning of field research to publication, took no more than two years.[42] His study of Tagalog has been described as "the best treatment of any Austronesian language ... The result is a description of Tagalog which has never been surpassed for completeness, accuracy, and wealth of exemplification."[43]

Bloomfield's only other publication on an Austronesian language was an article on the syntax of Ilocano, based upon research undertaken with a native speaker of Ilocano who was a student at Yale University. This article has been described as a "tour de force, for it covers in less than seven pages the entire taxonomic syntax of Ilocano".[44][45]

Algonquian linguistics edit

Bloomfield's work on Algonquian languages had both descriptive and comparative components. He published extensively on four Algonquian languages: Fox, Cree, Menominee, and Ojibwe, publishing grammars, lexicons, and text collections. Bloomfield used the materials collected in his descriptive work to undertake comparative studies leading to the reconstruction of Proto-Algonquian, with an early study reconstructing the sound system of Proto-Algonquian,[46] and a subsequent more extensive paper refining his phonological analysis and adding extensive historical information on general features of Algonquian grammar.[47]

Bloomfield undertook field research on Cree, Menominee, and Ojibwe, and analysed the material in previously published Fox text collections. His first Algonquian research, beginning around 1919, involved study of text collections in the Fox language that had been published by William Jones and Truman Michelson.[48][49] Working through the texts in these collections, Bloomfield excerpted grammatical information to create a grammatical sketch of Fox.[50] A lexicon of Fox based on his excerpted material was published posthumously.[51]

Bloomfield undertook field research on Menominee in the summers of 1920 and 1921, with further brief field research in September 1939 and intermittent visits from Menominee speakers in Chicago in the late 1930s, in addition to correspondence with speakers during the same period.[52] Material collected by Morris Swadesh in 1937 and 1938, often in response to specific queries from Bloomfield, supplemented his information.[53] Significant publications include a collection of texts,[54] a grammar and a lexicon (both published posthumously),[55][56] in addition to a theoretically significant article on Menomini phonological alternations.[57]

Bloomfield undertook field research in 1925 among Plains Cree speakers in Saskatchewan at the Sweet Grass reserve, and also at the Star Blanket reserve, resulting in two volumes of texts and a posthumous lexicon.[58][59][60] He also undertook brief field work on Swampy Cree at The Pas, Manitoba. Bloomfield's work on Swampy Cree provided data to support the predictive power of the hypothesis of exceptionless phonological change.[26]

Bloomfield's initial research on Ojibwe was through study of texts collected by William Jones, in addition to nineteenth century grammars and dictionaries.[61][62] During the 1938 Linguistic Society of America Linguistic Institute held at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, he taught a field methods class with Andrew Medler, a speaker of the Ottawa dialect who was born in Saginaw, Michigan, but spent most of his life on Walpole Island, Ontario. The resulting grammatical description, transcribed sentences, texts, and lexicon were published posthumously in a single volume.[63] In 1941 Bloomfield worked with Ottawa dialect speaker Angeline Williams at the 1941 Linguistic Institute held at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, resulting in a posthumously published volume of texts.[64]

Selected publications edit

  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1909/1910. "A semasiological differentiation in Germanic secondary ablaut". Modern Philology 7:245–288; 345–382.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1911). "The Indo-European Palatals in Sanskrit". The American Journal of Philology. 32 (1): 36–57. doi:10.2307/288802. hdl:2027/uiuo.ark:/13960/t0mt16d4t. JSTOR 288802.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1914. Introduction to the Study of Language. New York: Henry Holt. Reprinted 1983, John Benjamins. Retrieved April 19, 2009. ISBN 90-272-1892-7.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1914a). "Sentence and Word". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 45: 65–75. doi:10.2307/282688. JSTOR 282688.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1916). "Subject and Predicate". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 47: 13–22. doi:10.2307/282823. JSTOR 282823.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1917. Tagalog texts with grammatical analysis. University of Illinois studies in language and literature, 3.2-4. Urbana, Illinois.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1925). "Why a linguistic society?". Language. 1 (1): 1–5. JSTOR 409544.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1925a). "On the sound-system of Central Algonquian". Language. 1 (4): 130–156. doi:10.2307/409540. JSTOR 409540.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1925–1927. "Notes on the Fox language." International Journal of American Linguistics 3:219-232; 4: 181-219
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1926). "A set of postulates for the science of language" (PDF). Language. 2 (3): 153–164. doi:10.2307/408741. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-002A-5F51-4. JSTOR 408741. (reprinted in: Martin Joos, ed., Readings in Linguistics I, Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press 1957, 26–31).
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1927). "On Some Rules of Pāṇini". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 47: 61–70. doi:10.2307/593241. JSTOR 593241.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1927a). "Literate and illiterate speech". American Speech. 2 (10): 432–441. doi:10.2307/451863. JSTOR 451863. S2CID 147012813.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1928. Menomini texts. Publications of the American Ethnological Society 12. New York: G. E. Stechert, Agents. [reprinted 1974. New York: AMS Press] ISBN 0-404-58162-5
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1928a). "A note on sound change". Language. 4 (2): 99–100. doi:10.2307/408791. JSTOR 408791.
  • Bloomfield, Leondard. 1929. Review of Bruno Liebich, 1928, Konkordanz Pāṇini-Candra, Breslau: M. & H. Marcus. Language 5:267–276. Reprinted in Hockett, Charles. 1970, pp. 219–226.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1930. Sacred stories of the Sweet Grass Cree. National Museum of Canada Bulletin, 60 (Anthropological Series 11). Ottawa. [reprinted 1993, Saskatoon, SK: Fifth House]. ISBN 1-895618-27-4
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1933. Language. New York: Henry Holt. ISBN 0-226-06067-5, ISBN 90-272-1892-7
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1934. Plains Cree texts. American Ethnological Society Publications 16. New York. [reprinted 1974, New York: AMS Press]
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1935. "Linguistic aspects of science". Philosophy of Science 2/4:499–517.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1939. "Menomini morphophonemics". Etudes phonologiques dédiées à la mémoire de M. le prince N.S. Trubetzkoy, 105–115. Travaux du Cercle Linguistique de Prague 8. Prague.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1939a. Linguistic aspects of science. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-57579-9
  • Bloomfield, Leonard (1942). "Outline of Ilocano syntax". Language. 18 (3): 193–200. doi:10.2307/409552. JSTOR 409552.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1942a. Outline guide for the practical study of foreign languages. Baltimore: Linguistic Society of America.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1946. "Algonquian." Harry Hoijer et al., eds., Linguistic structures of native America, pp. 85–129. Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology 6. New York: Wenner-Gren Foundation.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1958. Eastern Ojibwa. Ed. Charles F. Hockett. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1962. The Menomini language. Ed. Charles F. Hockett. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1975. Menomini lexicon. Ed. Charles F. Hockett. Milwaukee Public Museum Publications in Anthropology and History. Milwaukee: Milwaukee Public Museum.
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1984. Cree-English lexicon. Ed. Charles F. Hockett. New Haven: Human Relations Area Files. ISBN 99954-923-9-3
  • Bloomfield, Leonard. 1984b. Fox-English lexicon. Ed. Charles F. Hockett. New Haven: Human Relations Area Files. ISBN 99954-923-7-7

Notes edit

  1. ^ Flack, Patrick (2016). "Roman Jakobson and the Transition of German Thought to the Structuralist Paradigm". Acta Structuralica. 1: 1–15. doi:10.17613/M6BX9Z.
  2. ^ "Harrisian distributionalism is usually represented as a prime exemplar of the alleged striving of 'Bloomfieldians' to eliminate meaning from linguistics. In fact, it explicates Leonard Bloomfield's affirmation that the form of an utterance and the meaning that it conveys are two aspects of the same thing. It has a deep connection with the search for configuration and pattern in language data exemplified by Edward Sapir, who regarded Harris as his intellectual heir." Zellig Harris, Description
  3. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1933
  4. ^ de Lourdes R. da F. Passos, Maria; Matos, Maria Amelia (2007). "The Influence of Bloomfield's Linguistics on Skinner". The Behavior Analyst. 30 (2): 133–151. doi:10.1007/BF03392151. ISSN 0738-6729. PMC 2203636. PMID 22478493.
  5. ^ "Structuralism | Definition, Characteristics, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  6. ^ Depres, Leon, 1987, p. 11, Fn. 1
  7. ^ Hall, Robert, 1990, pp. 5–6
  8. ^ a b Despres, Leon, 1987, p. 4
  9. ^ a b c Bloch, Bernard, 1949, p. 87
  10. ^ Hall, Robert, 1990, pp. 7–8
  11. ^ Hall, Robert, 1990, p. 16
  12. ^ Rogers, David, 1987
  13. ^ Hall, Robert, 1990, pp. 13–14
  14. ^ Bloch, Bernard, 1949, p. 88
  15. ^ Hockett, Charles, 1987, p. 40
  16. ^ Born, Renate (2005), 'Bloomfield, Leonard', in Strazny, Philip (ed.), "Encyclopedia of Linguistics", New York: Fitzroy Dearborn
  17. ^ Anonymous, 1925
  18. ^ Hall, Robert, 1990, p. 27
  19. ^ a b Bloomfield, Leonard, 1925
  20. ^ Hockett, Charles, 1970, 323
  21. ^ Bloch lists only 1938–40, but Hall lists 1938–1941; Bloch, Bernard, 1949, 88; Hall, Robert, 1990, p. 52
  22. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2023-04-18.
  23. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1909/1910
  24. ^ Bloch, Bernard, 1949, 88
  25. ^ Lehman, Winfred, 1987, pp. 163–164
  26. ^ a b Bloomfield, Leonard, 1928a
  27. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1911
  28. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1927
  29. ^ a b Lehmann, Winfred, 1987, pp. 164–165
  30. ^ Lehmann, Winfred, 1987, 165
  31. ^ Lehman, Winfred, 1987, 167
  32. ^ Lehmann, Winfred, 1987, pp. 167–168
  33. ^ Cardona, George (1997). Pāṇini: a survey of research. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 8120814940. OCLC 1014545991.
  34. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1929, 274; cited in Rogers, David, 1987, p. 88
  35. ^ Hockett, Charles, 1987, p. 41
  36. ^ Rogers, David, 1987, 90
  37. ^ Wujastyk, Dominik (1982). "Bloomfield and the Sanskrit Origin of the Terms 'Exocentric' and 'Endocentric'". Historiographia Linguistica. 9 (1–2): 179–184. doi:10.1075/hl.9.1-2.19wuj. ISSN 0302-5160.
  38. ^ Rogers, David, 1987, pp. 103–114
  39. ^ Rogers, David, 1987, pp. 120–122
  40. ^ Rogers, David, 1987, pp. 126–128
  41. ^ Hockett, Charles F., 1970, pp. 78–79
  42. ^ Wolff, John, 1987, p. 174
  43. ^ Wolff, John, 1987, p. 173
  44. ^ Wolff, John, 1987, p. 176
  45. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1942
  46. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1925a
  47. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1946
  48. ^ Jones, William, 1907
  49. ^ Michelson, Truman, 1921
  50. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1925–1927
  51. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1984b
  52. ^ Goddard, Ives, 1987, pp. 179, 187–188
  53. ^ Goddard, Ives, 1987, pp. 179-180
  54. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1928
  55. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1962
  56. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1975
  57. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1939
  58. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1930
  59. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1934
  60. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1984
  61. ^ Jones, William, 1917, 1919
  62. ^ Goddard, Ives, 1987
  63. ^ Bloomfield, Leonard, 1958
  64. ^ Nichols, John and Leonard Bloomfield, eds., 1991

References edit

  • Anonymous (1925). "The call for the organization meeting". Language. 1 (1): 6–7. JSTOR 409545.
  • Bloch, Bernard (1949). "Leonard Bloomfield". Language. 25 (2): 87–89. JSTOR 409937.
  • Despres, Leon M. 1987. “My recollections of Leonard Bloomfield.” Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 3–14. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Fought, John G. 1999a. Leonard Bloomfield: Biographical Sketches. Taylor & Francis.
  • Fought, John G. 1999b. "Leonard Bloomfield's linguistic legacy: Later uses of some technical features". Historiographica linguistica 26/3: 313–332. [1][permanent dead link]
  • Goddard, Ives. 1987. "Leonard Bloomfield's descriptive and comparative studies of Algonquian". Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 179–217. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Hall, Robert A. Jr. 1987. Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work. Amsterdam: Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Hall, Robert A. 1987. "Bloomfield and semantics". Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 155–160. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Hall, Robert A. Jr. 1990. A life for language: A biographical memoir of Leonard Bloomfield. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 1-55619-350-5
  • Hockett, Charles F., ed., 1970. A Leonard Bloomfield Anthology. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-226-06071-3
  • Harris, Randy Allen. 1995. The Linguistics Wars. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Hockett, Charles F. 1987. “Letters from Bloomfield to Michelson and Sapir.” Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 39–60. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Hockett, Charles F. 1999. "Leonard Bloomfield: After fifty years." Historiographica linguistica 26/3: 295–311. [2][permanent dead link]
  • Hoenigswald, Henry M. 1987. “Bloomfield and historical linguistics.” Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 73–88. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Jones, William. 1907. "Fox texts". American Ethnological Society Publications 1. Leiden. [reprinted 1974, New York: AMS Press]
  • Jones, William. 1911. "Algonquian (Fox)". [edited posthumously by Truman Michelson] Franz Boas, ed., Handbook of American Indian languages, Part I, pp. 735–873. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 40. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
  • Jones, William. 1917. Ojibwa texts. Volume 1. Ed. Truman Michelson. Leiden: American Ethnological Society Publications 7.1 (Vol. 1).
  • Jones, William. 1919. Ojibwa texts. Volume 2. Ed. Truman Michelson. New York: G. Stechert.
  • Lehmann, Winfred P. 1987. "Bloomfield as an Indo-Europeanist". Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 163–172. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Manaster Ramer, Alexis. 1992–1993. "Ever since Bloomfield". in: Proceedings of the international congress of linguists 15/1: 308–310. [3][permanent dead link]
  • Michelson, Truman. 1921. "The Owl sacred pack of the Fox Indians". Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 72. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
  • Michelson, Truman. 1925. "Accompanying papers". Bureau of American Ethnology Annual Report 40: 21–658. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
  • Nichols, John D. and Leonard Bloomfield, eds. 1991. The dog's children. Anishinaabe texts told by Angeline Williams. Winnipeg: Publications of the Algonquian Text Society, University of Manitoba. ISBN 0-88755-148-3
  • Robins, R. H. "Leonard Bloomfield: The man and the man of science". Transactions of the Philological Society 86: 63–87.
  • Rogers, David E. 1987. "The influence of Pāṇini on Leonard Bloomfield". Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 89–138. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Sayers, Frances Clarke. 1987. "The small mythologies of Leonard Bloomfield". Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 16–21. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4
  • Wolff, John U. 1987. "Bloomfield as an Austronesianist". Robert A. Hall, Jr., ed., Leonard Bloomfield: Essays on his life and work, pp. 173–178. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4530-4

External links edit

  • A biography ()
  • A bibliographic list about Bloomfield's reputation as a teacher 2007-01-08 at the Wayback Machine in Linguist List website.
  • Leonard Bloomfield "Linguistics and Mathematics" (Marcus Tomalin) ()
  • , National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution (archived version)
  • Leonard Bloomfield Book Award, Linguistic Society of America
  • Guide to the Leonard Bloomfield Papers 1935-1943 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center

leonard, bloomfield, confused, with, leonard, blomefield, leonard, broom, leonard, bloom, basque, linguist, university, bridgeport, april, 1887, april, 1949, american, linguist, development, structural, linguistics, united, states, during, 1930s, 1940s, consid. Not to be confused with Leonard Blomefield Leonard Broom or Leonard Bloom Basque linguist at University of Bridgeport Leonard Bloomfield April 1 1887 April 18 1949 was an American linguist who led the development of structural linguistics in the United States during the 1930s and the 1940s He is considered to be the father of American distributionalism 1 2 His influential textbook Language published in 1933 presented a comprehensive description of American structural linguistics 3 He made significant contributions to Indo European historical linguistics the description of Austronesian languages and description of languages of the Algonquian family Leonard BloomfieldBorn 1887 04 01 April 1 1887Chicago Illinois USDiedApril 18 1949 1949 04 18 aged 62 New Haven Connecticut USAlma materHarvard College University of Wisconsin University of Chicago University of Leipzig University of GottingenSpouseAlice SayersScientific careerFieldsLinguistics EthnolinguisticsInstitutionsUniversity of Cincinnati University of Illinois Ohio State University University of Chicago Yale UniversityBloomfield s approach to linguistics was characterized by its emphasis on the scientific basis of linguistics and emphasis on formal procedures for the analysis of linguistic data 4 The influence of Bloomfieldian structural linguistics declined in the late 1950s and 1960s as the theory of generative grammar developed by Noam Chomsky came to predominate 5 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Indo European linguistics 3 1 Sanskrit studies 4 Austronesian linguistics 5 Algonquian linguistics 6 Selected publications 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education editBloomfield was born in Chicago Illinois on April 1 1887 to Jewish parents Sigmund Bloomfield and Carola Buber Bloomfield His father immigrated to the United States as a child in 1868 the original family name Blumenfeld was changed to Bloomfield after their arrival 6 In 1896 his family moved to Elkhart Lake Wisconsin where he attended elementary school but returned to Chicago for secondary school 7 His uncle Maurice Bloomfield was a prominent linguist at Johns Hopkins University 8 9 and his aunt Fannie Bloomfield Zeisler was a well known concert pianist 8 Bloomfield attended Harvard College from 1903 to 1906 graduating with the A B degree 9 He subsequently began graduate work at the University of Wisconsin taking courses in German and Germanic philology in addition to courses in other Indo European languages 10 A meeting with Indo Europeanist Eduard Prokosch a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin convinced Bloomfield to pursue a career in linguistics 9 In 1908 Bloomfield moved to the University of Chicago where he took courses in German and Indo European philology with Frances A Wood and Carl Darling Buck His doctoral dissertation in Germanic historical linguistics A semasiologic differentiation in Germanic secondary ablaut was supervised by Wood and he graduated in 1909 He undertook further studies at the University of Leipzig and the University of Gottingen in 1913 and 1914 with leading Indo Europeanists August Leskien Karl Brugmann as well as Hermann Oldenberg a specialist in Vedic Sanskrit Bloomfield also studied at Gottingen with Sanskrit specialist Jacob Wackernagel and considered both Wackernagel and the Sanskrit grammatical tradition of rigorous grammatical analysis associated with Paṇini as important influences on both his historical and descriptive work 11 12 Further training in Europe was a condition for promotion at the University of Illinois from Instructor to the rank of assistant professor 13 Career editBloomfield was instructor in German at the University of Cincinnati 1909 1910 Instructor in German at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign 1910 1913 promoted to Assistant Professor of Comparative Philology and German also University of Illinois 1913 1921 Professor of German and Linguistics at the Ohio State University 1921 1927 Professor of Germanic Philology at the University of Chicago 1927 1940 Sterling Professor of Linguistics at Yale University 1940 1949 During the summer of 1925 Bloomfield worked as Assistant Ethnologist with the Geological Survey of Canada in the Canadian Department of Mines undertaking linguistic field work on Plains Cree this position was arranged by Edward Sapir who was then Chief of the Division of Anthropology Victoria Museum Geological Survey of Canada Canadian Department of Mines 14 15 In May 1946 he suffered a debilitating stroke which ended his career 16 Bloomfield was one of the founding members of the Linguistic Society of America In 1924 along with George M Bolling Ohio State University and Edgar Sturtevant Yale University he formed a committee to organize the creation of the Society and drafted the call for the Society s foundation 17 18 He contributed the lead article to the inaugural issue of the Society s journal Language 19 and was President of the Society in 1935 20 He taught in the Society s summer Linguistic Institute in 1938 1941 with the 1938 1940 Institutes being held in Ann Arbor Michigan and the 1941 Institute in Chapel Hill North Carolina 21 Bloomfield was also a member of the American Philosophical Society 22 Indo European linguistics editBloomfield s earliest work was in historical Germanic studies beginning with his dissertation and continuing with a number of papers on Indo European and Germanic phonology and morphology 23 24 His post doctoral studies in Germany further strengthened his expertise in the Neogrammarian tradition which still dominated Indo European historical studies 25 Bloomfield throughout his career but particularly during his early career emphasized the Neogrammarian principle of regular sound change as a foundational concept in historical linguistics 19 26 Bloomfield s work in Indo European beyond his dissertation was limited to an article on palatal consonants in Sanskrit 27 and one article on the Sanskrit grammatical tradition associated with Paṇini 28 in addition to a number of book reviews Bloomfield made extensive use of Indo European materials to explain historical and comparative principles in both of his textbooks An introduction to language 1914 and his seminal Language 1933 29 In his textbooks he selected Indo European examples that supported the key Neogrammarian hypothesis of the regularity of sound change and emphasized a sequence of steps essential to success in comparative work a appropriate data in the form of texts which must be studied intensively and analysed b application of the comparative method c reconstruction of proto forms 29 He further emphasized the importance of dialect studies where appropriate and noted the significance of sociological factors such as prestige and the impact of meaning 30 In addition to regular linguistic change Bloomfield also allowed for borrowing and analogy 31 It is argued that Bloomfield s Indo European work had two broad implications He stated clearly the theoretical bases for Indo European linguistics and he established the study of Indo European languages firmly within general linguistics 32 Sanskrit studies edit As part of his training with leading Indo Europeanists in Germany in 1913 and 1914 Bloomfield studied the Sanskrit grammatical tradition originating with Paṇini who lived in northwestern India during the fifth or fourth century BC 33 Paṇini s grammar is characterized by its extreme thoroughness and explicitness in accounting for Sanskrit linguistic forms and by its complex context sensitive rule based generative structure Bloomfield noted that Paṇini gives the formation of every inflected compounded or derived word with an exact statement of the sound variations including accent and of the meaning 34 In a letter to Algonquianist Truman Michelson Bloomfield noted My models are Paṇini and the kind of work done in Indo European by my teacher Professor Wackernagel of Basle 35 Paṇini s systematic approach to analysis includes components for a forming grammatical rules b an inventory of sounds c a list of verbal roots organized into sublists and d a list of classes of morphs 36 Bloomfield s approach to key linguistic ideas in his textbook Language reflect the influence of Paṇini in his treatment of basic concepts such as linguistic form free form and others Similarly Paṇini is the source for Bloomfield s use of the terms exocentric and endocentric used to describe compound words 37 38 Concepts from Paṇini are found in Eastern Ojibwa published posthumously in 1958 in particular his use of the concept of a morphological zero a morpheme that has no overt realization 39 Paṇini s influence is also present in Bloomfield s approach to determining parts of speech Bloomfield uses the term form classes in both Eastern Ojibwa and in the later Menomini language published posthumously in 1962 40 Austronesian linguistics editWhile at the University of Illinois Bloomfield undertook research on Tagalog an Austronesian language spoken in the Philippines He carried out linguistic field work with Alfredo Viola Santiago who was an engineering student at the university from 1914 to 1917 The results were published as Tagalog texts with grammatical analysis which includes a series of texts dictated by Santiago in addition to an extensive grammatical description and analysis of every word in the texts 41 Bloomfield s work on Tagalog from the beginning of field research to publication took no more than two years 42 His study of Tagalog has been described as the best treatment of any Austronesian language The result is a description of Tagalog which has never been surpassed for completeness accuracy and wealth of exemplification 43 Bloomfield s only other publication on an Austronesian language was an article on the syntax of Ilocano based upon research undertaken with a native speaker of Ilocano who was a student at Yale University This article has been described as a tour de force for it covers in less than seven pages the entire taxonomic syntax of Ilocano 44 45 Algonquian linguistics editBloomfield s work on Algonquian languages had both descriptive and comparative components He published extensively on four Algonquian languages Fox Cree Menominee and Ojibwe publishing grammars lexicons and text collections Bloomfield used the materials collected in his descriptive work to undertake comparative studies leading to the reconstruction of Proto Algonquian with an early study reconstructing the sound system of Proto Algonquian 46 and a subsequent more extensive paper refining his phonological analysis and adding extensive historical information on general features of Algonquian grammar 47 Bloomfield undertook field research on Cree Menominee and Ojibwe and analysed the material in previously published Fox text collections His first Algonquian research beginning around 1919 involved study of text collections in the Fox language that had been published by William Jones and Truman Michelson 48 49 Working through the texts in these collections Bloomfield excerpted grammatical information to create a grammatical sketch of Fox 50 A lexicon of Fox based on his excerpted material was published posthumously 51 Bloomfield undertook field research on Menominee in the summers of 1920 and 1921 with further brief field research in September 1939 and intermittent visits from Menominee speakers in Chicago in the late 1930s in addition to correspondence with speakers during the same period 52 Material collected by Morris Swadesh in 1937 and 1938 often in response to specific queries from Bloomfield supplemented his information 53 Significant publications include a collection of texts 54 a grammar and a lexicon both published posthumously 55 56 in addition to a theoretically significant article on Menomini phonological alternations 57 Bloomfield undertook field research in 1925 among Plains Cree speakers in Saskatchewan at the Sweet Grass reserve and also at the Star Blanket reserve resulting in two volumes of texts and a posthumous lexicon 58 59 60 He also undertook brief field work on Swampy Cree at The Pas Manitoba Bloomfield s work on Swampy Cree provided data to support the predictive power of the hypothesis of exceptionless phonological change 26 Bloomfield s initial research on Ojibwe was through study of texts collected by William Jones in addition to nineteenth century grammars and dictionaries 61 62 During the 1938 Linguistic Society of America Linguistic Institute held at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor Michigan he taught a field methods class with Andrew Medler a speaker of the Ottawa dialect who was born in Saginaw Michigan but spent most of his life on Walpole Island Ontario The resulting grammatical description transcribed sentences texts and lexicon were published posthumously in a single volume 63 In 1941 Bloomfield worked with Ottawa dialect speaker Angeline Williams at the 1941 Linguistic Institute held at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill North Carolina resulting in a posthumously published volume of texts 64 Selected publications editBloomfield Leonard 1909 1910 A semasiological differentiation in Germanic secondary ablaut Modern Philology 7 245 288 345 382 Bloomfield Leonard 1911 The Indo European Palatals in Sanskrit The American Journal of Philology 32 1 36 57 doi 10 2307 288802 hdl 2027 uiuo ark 13960 t0mt16d4t JSTOR 288802 Bloomfield Leonard 1914 Introduction to the Study of Language New York Henry Holt Reprinted 1983 John Benjamins Retrieved April 19 2009 ISBN 90 272 1892 7 Bloomfield Leonard 1914a Sentence and Word Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 45 65 75 doi 10 2307 282688 JSTOR 282688 Bloomfield Leonard 1916 Subject and Predicate Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 47 13 22 doi 10 2307 282823 JSTOR 282823 Bloomfield Leonard 1917 Tagalog texts with grammatical analysis University of Illinois studies in language and literature 3 2 4 Urbana Illinois Bloomfield Leonard 1925 Why a linguistic society Language 1 1 1 5 JSTOR 409544 Bloomfield Leonard 1925a On the sound system of Central Algonquian Language 1 4 130 156 doi 10 2307 409540 JSTOR 409540 Bloomfield Leonard 1925 1927 Notes on the Fox language International Journal of American Linguistics 3 219 232 4 181 219 Bloomfield Leonard 1926 A set of postulates for the science of language PDF Language 2 3 153 164 doi 10 2307 408741 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 002A 5F51 4 JSTOR 408741 reprinted in Martin Joos ed Readings in Linguistics I Chicago and London The University of Chicago Press 1957 26 31 Bloomfield Leonard 1927 On Some Rules of Paṇini Journal of the American Oriental Society 47 61 70 doi 10 2307 593241 JSTOR 593241 Bloomfield Leonard 1927a Literate and illiterate speech American Speech 2 10 432 441 doi 10 2307 451863 JSTOR 451863 S2CID 147012813 Bloomfield Leonard 1928 Menomini texts Publications of the American Ethnological Society 12 New York G E Stechert Agents reprinted 1974 New York AMS Press ISBN 0 404 58162 5 Bloomfield Leonard 1928a A note on sound change Language 4 2 99 100 doi 10 2307 408791 JSTOR 408791 Bloomfield Leondard 1929 Review of Bruno Liebich 1928 Konkordanz Paṇini Candra Breslau M amp H Marcus Language 5 267 276 Reprinted in Hockett Charles 1970 pp 219 226 Bloomfield Leonard 1930 Sacred stories of the Sweet Grass Cree National Museum of Canada Bulletin 60 Anthropological Series 11 Ottawa reprinted 1993 Saskatoon SK Fifth House ISBN 1 895618 27 4 Bloomfield Leonard 1933 Language New York Henry Holt ISBN 0 226 06067 5 ISBN 90 272 1892 7 Bloomfield Leonard 1934 Plains Cree texts American Ethnological Society Publications 16 New York reprinted 1974 New York AMS Press Bloomfield Leonard 1935 Linguistic aspects of science Philosophy of Science 2 4 499 517 Bloomfield Leonard 1939 Menomini morphophonemics Etudes phonologiques dediees a la memoire de M le prince N S Trubetzkoy 105 115 Travaux du Cercle Linguistique de Prague 8 Prague Bloomfield Leonard 1939a Linguistic aspects of science Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 57579 9 Bloomfield Leonard 1942 Outline of Ilocano syntax Language 18 3 193 200 doi 10 2307 409552 JSTOR 409552 Bloomfield Leonard 1942a Outline guide for the practical study of foreign languages Baltimore Linguistic Society of America Bloomfield Leonard 1946 Algonquian Harry Hoijer et al eds Linguistic structures of native America pp 85 129 Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology 6 New York Wenner Gren Foundation Bloomfield Leonard 1958 Eastern Ojibwa Ed Charles F Hockett Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press Bloomfield Leonard 1962 The Menomini language Ed Charles F Hockett New Haven Yale University Press Bloomfield Leonard 1975 Menomini lexicon Ed Charles F Hockett Milwaukee Public Museum Publications in Anthropology and History Milwaukee Milwaukee Public Museum Bloomfield Leonard 1984 Cree English lexicon Ed Charles F Hockett New Haven Human Relations Area Files ISBN 99954 923 9 3 Bloomfield Leonard 1984b Fox English lexicon Ed Charles F Hockett New Haven Human Relations Area Files ISBN 99954 923 7 7Notes edit Flack Patrick 2016 Roman Jakobson and the Transition of German Thought to the Structuralist Paradigm Acta Structuralica 1 1 15 doi 10 17613 M6BX9Z Harrisian distributionalism is usually represented as a prime exemplar of the alleged striving of Bloomfieldians to eliminate meaning from linguistics In fact it explicates Leonard Bloomfield s affirmation that the form of an utterance and the meaning that it conveys are two aspects of the same thing It has a deep connection with the search for configuration and pattern in language data exemplified by Edward Sapir who regarded Harris as his intellectual heir Zellig Harris Description Bloomfield Leonard 1933 de Lourdes R da F Passos Maria Matos Maria Amelia 2007 The Influence of Bloomfield s Linguistics on Skinner The Behavior Analyst 30 2 133 151 doi 10 1007 BF03392151 ISSN 0738 6729 PMC 2203636 PMID 22478493 Structuralism Definition Characteristics amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 03 31 Depres Leon 1987 p 11 Fn 1 Hall Robert 1990 pp 5 6 a b Despres Leon 1987 p 4 a b c Bloch Bernard 1949 p 87 Hall Robert 1990 pp 7 8 Hall Robert 1990 p 16 Rogers David 1987 Hall Robert 1990 pp 13 14 Bloch Bernard 1949 p 88 Hockett Charles 1987 p 40 Born Renate 2005 Bloomfield Leonard in Strazny Philip ed Encyclopedia of Linguistics New York Fitzroy Dearborn Anonymous 1925 Hall Robert 1990 p 27 a b Bloomfield Leonard 1925 Hockett Charles 1970 323 Bloch lists only 1938 40 but Hall lists 1938 1941 Bloch Bernard 1949 88 Hall Robert 1990 p 52 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2023 04 18 Bloomfield Leonard 1909 1910 Bloch Bernard 1949 88 Lehman Winfred 1987 pp 163 164 a b Bloomfield Leonard 1928a Bloomfield Leonard 1911 Bloomfield Leonard 1927 a b Lehmann Winfred 1987 pp 164 165 Lehmann Winfred 1987 165 Lehman Winfred 1987 167 Lehmann Winfred 1987 pp 167 168 Cardona George 1997 Paṇini a survey of research Delhi Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 8120814940 OCLC 1014545991 Bloomfield Leonard 1929 274 cited in Rogers David 1987 p 88 Hockett Charles 1987 p 41 Rogers David 1987 90 Wujastyk Dominik 1982 Bloomfield and the Sanskrit Origin of the Terms Exocentric and Endocentric Historiographia Linguistica 9 1 2 179 184 doi 10 1075 hl 9 1 2 19wuj ISSN 0302 5160 Rogers David 1987 pp 103 114 Rogers David 1987 pp 120 122 Rogers David 1987 pp 126 128 Hockett Charles F 1970 pp 78 79 Wolff John 1987 p 174 Wolff John 1987 p 173 Wolff John 1987 p 176 Bloomfield Leonard 1942 Bloomfield Leonard 1925a Bloomfield Leonard 1946 Jones William 1907 Michelson Truman 1921 Bloomfield Leonard 1925 1927 Bloomfield Leonard 1984b Goddard Ives 1987 pp 179 187 188 Goddard Ives 1987 pp 179 180 Bloomfield Leonard 1928 Bloomfield Leonard 1962 Bloomfield Leonard 1975 Bloomfield Leonard 1939 Bloomfield Leonard 1930 Bloomfield Leonard 1934 Bloomfield Leonard 1984 Jones William 1917 1919 Goddard Ives 1987 Bloomfield Leonard 1958 Nichols John and Leonard Bloomfield eds 1991References editAnonymous 1925 The call for the organization meeting Language 1 1 6 7 JSTOR 409545 Bloch Bernard 1949 Leonard Bloomfield Language 25 2 87 89 JSTOR 409937 Despres Leon M 1987 My recollections of Leonard Bloomfield Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 3 14 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Fought John G 1999a Leonard Bloomfield Biographical Sketches Taylor amp Francis Fought John G 1999b Leonard Bloomfield s linguistic legacy Later uses of some technical features Historiographica linguistica 26 3 313 332 1 permanent dead link Goddard Ives 1987 Leonard Bloomfield s descriptive and comparative studies of Algonquian Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 179 217 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Hall Robert A Jr 1987 Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work Amsterdam Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Hall Robert A 1987 Bloomfield and semantics Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 155 160 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Hall Robert A Jr 1990 A life for language A biographical memoir of Leonard Bloomfield Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 1 55619 350 5 Hockett Charles F ed 1970 A Leonard Bloomfield Anthology Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 226 06071 3 Harris Randy Allen 1995 The Linguistics Wars New York Oxford University Press Hockett Charles F 1987 Letters from Bloomfield to Michelson and Sapir Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 39 60 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Hockett Charles F 1999 Leonard Bloomfield After fifty years Historiographica linguistica 26 3 295 311 2 permanent dead link Hoenigswald Henry M 1987 Bloomfield and historical linguistics Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 73 88 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Jones William 1907 Fox texts American Ethnological Society Publications 1 Leiden reprinted 1974 New York AMS Press Jones William 1911 Algonquian Fox edited posthumously by Truman Michelson Franz Boas ed Handbook of American Indian languages Part I pp 735 873 Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 40 Washington Smithsonian Institution Jones William 1917 Ojibwa texts Volume 1 Ed Truman Michelson Leiden American Ethnological Society Publications 7 1 Vol 1 Jones William 1919 Ojibwa texts Volume 2 Ed Truman Michelson New York G Stechert Lehmann Winfred P 1987 Bloomfield as an Indo Europeanist Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 163 172 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Manaster Ramer Alexis 1992 1993 Ever since Bloomfield in Proceedings of the international congress of linguists 15 1 308 310 3 permanent dead link Michelson Truman 1921 The Owl sacred pack of the Fox Indians Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 72 Washington Smithsonian Institution Michelson Truman 1925 Accompanying papers Bureau of American Ethnology Annual Report 40 21 658 Washington Smithsonian Institution Nichols John D and Leonard Bloomfield eds 1991 The dog s children Anishinaabe texts told by Angeline Williams Winnipeg Publications of the Algonquian Text Society University of Manitoba ISBN 0 88755 148 3 Robins R H Leonard Bloomfield The man and the man of science Transactions of the Philological Society 86 63 87 Rogers David E 1987 The influence of Paṇini on Leonard Bloomfield Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 89 138 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Sayers Frances Clarke 1987 The small mythologies of Leonard Bloomfield Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 16 21 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4 Wolff John U 1987 Bloomfield as an Austronesianist Robert A Hall Jr ed Leonard Bloomfield Essays on his life and work pp 173 178 Philadelphia John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 4530 4External links editA biography archived version A bibliographic list about Bloomfield s reputation as a teacher Archived 2007 01 08 at the Wayback Machine in Linguist List website Leonard Bloomfield Linguistics and Mathematics Marcus Tomalin archived version Finding Aid to the Papers of Leonard Bloomfield National Anthropological Archives Smithsonian Institution archived version Leonard Bloomfield Book Award Linguistic Society of America Guide to the Leonard Bloomfield Papers 1935 1943 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leonard Bloomfield amp oldid 1217935539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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