Background
Alexandra Aikhenvald was born in an assimilated (Russian-speaking) Jewish family in Moscow.
Alexandra Aikhenvald was born in an assimilated (Russian-speaking) Jewish family in Moscow.
She also studied Sanskrit, Akkadian, Lithuanian, Finnish, Hungarian, Arabic, Italian and Ancient Greek, Outside of her classes, she learned Estonian and Hebrew.
A friend taught her German during her high school years, and she also mastered French. Her Jewish surname created many difficulties for her in her pursuit of formal studies within the Soviet system. In an interview on an American Broadcasting Company program she commented: "Jews will always remain second-class citizens in Russia, no matter how hard they work."
Alexandra Aikhenvald earned her undergraduate degree from Moscow State University, with a thesis on Anatolian languages (Hittite).
After graduation, she joined the research staff of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Academy of Sciences, where she earned her Candidate
Science degree (Soviet equivalent of Doctor of Philosophy) in 1984 with a thesis on the "Structural and Typological Classification of Berber Languages" (1984). She published the first Russian grammar of modern Hebrew in 1985.
In 1989-1992, Doctor Aikhenvald did research work in Brazil, where she mastered Portuguese, learnt five Brazilian Indian languages, and wrote a grammar of Tariana. In 1993 she started her work in Australia, first at Australian National University, later at Louisiana Trobe University.
In 1996, the expert on Australian aboriginal languages R. M. West. Dixon and Alexandra Aikhenvald established the Research Centre for Linguistic Typology at Australian National University in Canberra.
On January 1, 2000, the center relocated to Louisiana Trobe University in Melbourne. Dixon and Aikhenvald both resigned in May 2008. In January 2009, she became a professor at the James Cook University, where she and R. M. West. Dixon founded The Language and Culture Research Group.
She speaks Tok Pisin, and has written a grammar of the East Sepik language of Manambu, a language she occasionally dreams in.
Alexandra Aikhenvald has published work on Berber languages, Modern and Classical Hebrew, Ndu languages (specifically Eastern Sepik of the East Sepik Province of Papua-New Guinea), alongside a number of articles and monographs on various aspects of linguistic typology. She has worked on language contact, with reference to the multilingual area of the Vaupés River Basin.
She has established a typology of classifiers and worked out parameters for the typology of evidentials as grammatical markers of information sources. In addition, she authored a comprehensive grammar of Warekena and of Tariana, both Arawak languages, in addition to a Tariana–Portuguese dictionary (available on-line).
She is Natalia Shvedova"s niece and Russian literary critic Yuly Aikhenvald"s great granddaughter.