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Personal bio
Beth Levin is the William H. Bonsall Professor in the Humanities at Stanford University. After receiving her Ph.D. from MIT in 1983, she had major responsibility for the MIT Lexicon Project (1983-1987) and taught in the Linguistics Department at Northwestern University (1987-1999), before joining the Stanford faculty in 1999. Her work investigates the linguistic representation of events and the grammatical devices English and other languages use to express events and their participants.
Currently teaching
LINGUIST 394: TA Training Workshop
(Autumn)
LINGUIST 232A: Lexical Semantics
(Autumn)
LINGUIST 393: Summer Research Activity
(Summer)
LINGUIST 395D: Linguistics Writing Group
(Summer)
LINGUIST 132: Lexical Semantic Typology
(Winter)
LINGUIST 390: M.A. Project
(Autumn, Winter, Spring)
LINGUIST 398: Directed Research
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
LINGUIST 399: Dissertation Research
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
SYMSYS 290: Master's Degree Project
(Autumn, Winter, Spring)
LINGUIST 397: Directed Reading
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
LINGUIST 198: Honors Research
(Winter, Spring)
LINGUIST 199: Independent Study
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
LINGUIST 396: Research Projects in Linguistics
(Winter)
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