Greetings (fwd)
Christopher Court
court at hawaii.edu
Mon May 1 23:18:42 UTC 2000
thank you very much, david mortensen, and all who have responded to my
forwarding of
prof. nguyen's message to me about contacting people in the US working on
Hmong. though he may only have though of contacting the "big names" i'm
sure that once prof. nguYEN realizes there is quite a community of not so
well known people working oN hmong< INCLUDING NATIVE SPEAKERS< HE WILL BE
VERY HAPPY>
PLEASE EXCUSE MY CAPITALS< THE "CAPS LOCK" KEY HAS JAMMED ON
CHRISTOPHER COURT
<
On Mon, 1 May 2000, David Mortensen wrote:
> Christopher Court wrote:
> >
> > can someone help professor nguyen? is there a hmong linguistics list in
> > the US? Could somebody please send it along?
> >
> > thank you very much,
> >
> > christopher court
>
> There is not, to the best of my knowledge, I list dedicated specifically
> to hmong linguistics. However, the is a mailing list on Hmong language
> to which a couple of linguists and a bunch of Hmong interested in
> various language issues subscribe. Even though it sounds like he wants
> to get in contact with the major people in the field (which he probably
> won't be able to do on this list) professor Nguyen may find it useful.
> Subscription information may be found at
> http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/4908/ . Since I assume he is not
> subscribed to this list, I'll also send the information to him.
>
> By the way, are there any scholars on this list who have done
> substantial work on Hmong-Mien languages? I am of course aware of Chris
> Courts doctoral thesis on Iu Mien (a copy of which I just purchased from
> UMI) but I wondered if there are any others?
>
> --
> David Mortensen | "Men, ... You're American officers. The
> English Lit & SEA Ling | officers of no other army in the world can
> slqtn at cc.usu.edu | make that statement. Think about it."
> saintchoj at myrealbox.com | --Joseph Heller, _Catch-22_
>
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