A.7 Completed PhD and MA degrees for which I was primary advisor

(Please note: This list includes only completed degrees for which I was the primary advisor. It does not include ongoing degrees or degress for which I was a secondary advisor.)

Dissertations

1. Reynolds, Robert J. 2016. Russian natural language processing for computer-assisted language learning. Capturing the benefits of deep morphological analysis in real-life applications. PhD Dissertation, UiT, The Arctic University of Norway.

2. Endresen, Anna. 2015. Non-Standard Allomorphy in Russian Prefixes: Corpus, Experimental, and Statistical Exploration. PhD Dissertation, University of Tromsø.

3. Kuznetsova, Julia. 2013. Linguistic Profiles: Correlations between Form and Meaning. PhD Dissertation, University of Tromsø.

4. Sokolova, Svetlana. 2012. Asymmetries in Linguistic Construal: Russian Prefixes and the Locative Alternation. PhD Dissertation, University of Tromsø.

5. LeBlanc, Nicholas. 2010. The polysemy of an “empty” prefix: A corpus-based cognitive semantic analysis of the Russian verbal prefix po-. PhD Dissertation, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

6. Ahn, Hyug. 2006. The Semantics of SJA in Russian: Focus on the Action. PhD Dissertation, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

7. Divjak, Dagmar. 2004. Degrees of Verb Integration: Conceptualizing and Categorizing Events in Russian. PhD Dissertation, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.

8. Keown [Stepan], Anne. 2004. Metaphorical Motivations for Politeness Strategies: Linguistic Evidence from Russian, Polish, and Czech. PhD Dissertation, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

9. Murphy, Patrick. 2004. Passive Prototypes, Topicality, and Conceptual Space. PhD Dissertation, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

10. Clancy, Steven. 2000. The Chain of BEING and HAVING in Slavic. PhD Dissertation, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

MA Theses

1. Skallman, Emma. 2012. The Interplay of Synonymy and Polysemy: The case of arrojar, echar, lanzar and tirar. MA Thesis, University of Tromsø.

2. Braut, Kristine Tjåland. 2010. To Speak or Not to Speak. MA Thesis, University of Tromsø.

3. Baydimirova, Anna. 2010. Russian Aspectual Prefixes O, OB, OBO: A Case Study of Allomorphy. MA Thesis, University of Tromsø.

4. Korba, John J. 2007. The Development of Overt Aspectual Marking among Russian Biaspectual Verbs. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

5. Styblo, Miroslav. 2006. English loanwords in modern Russian language. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

6. Bringe, Maya. 2006. A particle on the edge: A semantic/syntactic analysis of Russian xot’. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

7. LeBlanc, Nicholas. 2005. ITERATIVITY: The necessary construal for delimitative use in secondarily homogenized verbal predicates in Russian. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

8. Phillips, James. 2004. Investigating Accusative vs. Genitive through the Internet: An Analysis of Timberlake’s “Hierarchies in the Genitive of Negation”. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

9. Flanagan, Sean. 2004. Topology and Function in Spatial Conceptualization: A Cross-Linguistic Analysis of English over and Russian через and над. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

10. Fried, Jaclyn. 2003. Genetics Metaphors: a Cognitive Linguistic Analysis of the Metaphors for Breast Cancer Genetics. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

11. Zhu, Qingyu. 2001. Verbal Expressions of SURPRISE in Russian. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

12. Keown, Anne. 1999. Polite Pronouns in Russian and Czech: Metaphorical Motivations for their Origin and Usage. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

13. Torgerson, Dale Garth. 1998. The Status of Case Choice in Russian after Negated Transitive Verbs. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

14. Warren, John. 1998. Syntax and “Reflexive” Verbs in Russian. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

15. Clancy, Steven. 1997. Haves and Have-Nots: A Look at the Relationship Between HAVE and BE in Russian. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

16. Schnell, Colin Jay. 1996. Gone but not Forgotten: The u-stem desinence –ovi, -evi in Ukrainian. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

17. Kiser, Thomas. 1995. The Role of Consonant Alternation and the Associations Between Alternating Consonants in Modern Polish. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

18. Featherstone, Mychelle. 1994. The Qualitative/Relational Continuum. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

19. Frarie, Susan. 1992. Animacy in Czech and Russian. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.