Warren Cowgill | |
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Born | Grangeville, Idaho, U.S. | December 19, 1929
Died | June 20, 1985 | (aged 55)
Spouses |
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Children | 1 (born 1967) |
Parents |
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Relatives | George Cowgill (twin brother) |
Academic background | |
Education | |
Thesis | The Indo-European Long-Vowel Preterits (1957) |
Doctoral advisor |
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Academic work | |
Institutions | Yale University |
Main interests | Indo-European languages |
Warren Crawford Cowgill (/ˈkoʊɡɪl/ KOH-gill;[1] December 19, 1929 – June 20, 1985) was an American linguist. He was a professor of linguistics at Yale University and the Encyclopædia Britannica's authority on Indo-European linguistics.[2] Two separate Indo-European sound laws are named after him, Cowgill's law of Greek and Cowgill's law of Germanic.
Cowgill was unusual among Indo-European linguists of his time in believing that Indo-European should be classified as a branch of Indo-Hittite, with Hittite as a sister language of the Indo-European languages, rather than a daughter language.
Warren Cowgill and his twin brother, anthropologist George Cowgill, were born near Grangeville, Idaho. Along with his brother, he graduated from Stanford University in 1952 and received a Ph.D. from Yale in 1957. He was a member of the Yale faculty in the Department of Linguistics until his death in 1985.[3][4]
the first syllable rhymes with know, not with how.