91快播

UOG hosts discussion on changing CHamoru language

UOG hosts discussion on changing CHamoru language

UOG hosts discussion on changing CHamoru language


5/3/2023
        UOG Host discussion

V

isiting scholar Dr. Sandra Chung will share with the Guam public the findings of her research on how the CHamoru language is changing as part of a broader effort to keep the language thriving.
 

Regarded as one of the foremost scholars of the CHamoru language, Dr. Chung will discuss 鈥淐Hamoru Language Across Islands and Generations,鈥 at 6:30 p.m., Friday, May 5, in Room 101, HSS Building, 91快播. Participants can join on Zoom by clicking this link: https://zoom.us/j/97146231548
 
Dr. Chung is one of the two premier linguists who studied the CHamoru language in depth, the other being the late Don M. Topping, said UOG President Emeritus Robert Underwood.
 
鈥淪he brings a lot of knowledge about topics that we don鈥檛 normally consider in the development of the language and that鈥檚 the reason why it鈥檚 important to listen, to hear the results of their ongoing studies about changes in the language,鈥 Dr. Underwood said.
 
Dr. Chung is the author of the book 鈥淐hamorro Grammar鈥 and is a Distinguished Professor Emerita at the University of California Santa Cruz where she served as served as Chair of Linguistics.
 
She is also a consulting linguist on the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Documenting Endangered Languages grant.
 
The grant supports the project 鈥淒eveloping CHamoru Language Infrastructure: Goggue yan CHachalani Mo鈥檔a i Fino-ta,鈥 which is led by Dr. David Ruskin, Assistant Professor of Linguistics, Division of English and Applied Linguistics at UOG, and Dr. Underwood. Both serve as the project's co-principal investigators.
 
Through the grant, Dr. Ruskin and Dr. Underwood are training local CHamoru speakers in documentary linguistics and establishing archives of recordings of the increasingly endangered CHamoru language. 
 
Dr. Matthew Wagers, Professor and Chair of Linguistics at UC Santa Cruz, and Manuel F. Borja, an author, and educator who lives in Saipan, collaborated with Dr. Chung in the research. They investigated the different ways that CHamoru speakers in the Northern Marianas produce various sentence constructions.
 
鈥淯nderstanding how the language is changing and where it is headed is essential when forming policies to help bolster the language and foster its use. Work like Dr. Chung's shows us how important it is to act now to ensure a future for the CHamoru language,鈥 Dr. Ruskin said.
 
For more information, contact:
Dr. David Ruskin
UOG Assistant Professor of Linguistics, Division of English and Applied Linguistics
 
Dr. Robert Underwood
UOG President Emeritus