Background
Faingold, Eduardo Daniel was born on September 6, 1958 in La Plata, Argentina. Son of Enrique and Annie (Turkenich) Faingold. came to the United States, 1990.
( Researchers in Romance languages will find this book a ...)
Researchers in Romance languages will find this book a stimulating and broad-ranging treatment of the development of grammar, demonstrating the relevance of markedness for both linguistic theory and language teaching. A substantial and original account of a unique body of data, across first and second language acquisition, creolization and historical linguistics and across a wide range of languages and contact varieties, demonstrates a new impetus and predictive force for markedness theory.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1403900523/?tag=2022091-20
(This book studies the acquisition, loss and re-acquisitio...)
This book studies the acquisition, loss and re-acquisition of Spanish, English, Portuguese, and Hebrew, the first languages of this writer's son. It applies the results of current work in the areas of psycholinguistics, bilingualism, and applied linguistics to the study of language development in one multilingual child, Noam, from birth to age 17. The acquisition, loss, and re-acquisition of four languages by Noam also is compared with that of other children studied by the author and others. This book uncovers linguistic, cognitive, psychological, and social mechanisms of language acquisition, loss, and re-acquisition and documents the child's increasing, decreasing, and, in turn, increasing proficiency in four languages. This book applies Dromi's guidelines for qualitative case-study research to the study of language development in one multilingual child (Spanish, Portuguese, Hebrew, English), Noam, from birth to age seventeen. In addition, the results of Noam's case study are compared with other case studies conducted by this author as well as by other researchers.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1593110901/?tag=2022091-20
(The author chronicles his family's experiences before, du...)
The author chronicles his family's experiences before, during, and after the military dictatorship in Argentina (1976-1983). He uses his diaries, interviews in Latin America and Israel, documents and pictures given to him by his family and friends and studies the works of political scientists, historians and journalists. He begins with his family's history from the time when they immigrated from Tsarist Russia to Argentina in the 19th century. Then, using his family's history as a background, he discusses his life as an exile in Israel and Denmark from 1976 to 1979, his return to Argentina to comply with military service in the Argentine Marine Infantry and his return to Israel in 1980. During the Argentine dictatorship thousands of people “disappeared”. Two million Argentines went into exile. This book makes an important contribution to the collective memory of Argentina and the concept of Never Again. Eduardo D. Faingold is Associate Professor of Spanish at the University of Tulsa and the author of numerous books, including most recently The Development of Phonology in Spanish and Portuguese and Emigrar después del Exilio.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1593119941/?tag=2022091-20
researcher language and linguistics educator
Faingold, Eduardo Daniel was born on September 6, 1958 in La Plata, Argentina. Son of Enrique and Annie (Turkenich) Faingold. came to the United States, 1990.
Bachelor in English and French, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel, 1984. Master of Arts in English, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel, 1987. Doctor of Philosophy in Linguistics, Tel-Aviv University, 1992.
Visiting scholar Technology University Berlin, 1988-1989, University of California at Los Angeles, 1990-1992, State University of New York, Stony Brook, 1992-1995. Assistant professor University Tulsa, 1995—2002, associate professor, since 2003. Advisor United Nations Educational, 1998.
Guest professor Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 1984. Visiting professor University California, Santa Barbara, 2001. Visiting scientist Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, 2002, University Cape Town, South Africa, 2003.
Visiting professor Lüneburg University, 2006, Hebrew University, Jerusalem.
( Researchers in Romance languages will find this book a ...)
(This book studies the acquisition, loss and re-acquisitio...)
(The author chronicles his family's experiences before, du...)
Member of Modern Language Association, International Phonetic Association, International Academy Linguistic Law, Salzburg Seminal Alumni Association, International Linguistic Association, Linguistic Society of America, Linguistic Association Southwest, International Clinical and Linguistics Association.
Married Sonia D. Hocherman. 1 child, Noam.