Professor David Crystal FBA

Linguistics
Fellow type
UK Emeritus Fellow
Year elected
2000
Subjects
Linguistics

Summary

David Crystal is honorary professor of linguistics at the University of Bangor, and works from his home in Holyhead, North Wales as a writer, editor, lecturer, and broadcaster in language and linguistics, with particular reference to the English language. Born in Lisburn, Northern Ireland, in 1941, he spent his early childhood in Holyhead, attended secondary school in Liverpool, and read English at University College London. After a research year at UCL's Survey of English Usage, he lectured at Bangor and then joined the new department of linguistics at Reading in 1965, where a decade later he became professor of linguistic science. He left the full-time university world in 1984 to work as an independent scholar. His writing takes in most areas of language study, his best-known authored books including The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language and The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language. His editorial work has included acting as general editor of the Cambridge and Penguin families of general encyclopedias, and the online edition of the entire oeuvre of the missionary poet John Bradburne. An autobiographical memoir, Just a Phrase I'm Going Through, was published in 2009. He received an OBE for services to the English language in 1995.

Current post

Honorary Professor of Linguistics, University of Bangor

Past appointments

University of Bangor Honorary Professor of Linguistics

1985 -

University of Bangor Honorary Professor of Linguistics, University of Bangor

1985 -

University of Reading Professor of Linguistic Science

1975 - 1985

Publications

The Oxford Dictionary of Original Shakespearean Pronunciation 2016

The Stories of English 2004

Just a Phrase I'm Going Through 2009

Clinical linguistics 1981

The Cambridge encyclopedia of language 1987

The Cambridge encyclopedia of the English language 1997

Other Fellows of the British Academy

Professor Terttu Nevalainen FBA

The history of the English language, particularly of the Early Modern English period; historical sociolinguistics; language variation and change; corpus linguistics; design and compilation of digital text corpora

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Professor Katalin É. Kiss FBA

Generative linguistic theory; syntax, the syntax of Hungarian, information structure, the grammar of quantification

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Professor David Langslow FBA

Latin, Greek and Indo-European languages and their descriptive, historical and social linguistics; ancient special and technical varieties, especially as reflected in the translation and transmission of ancient medical texts

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