Keren Rice


Keren Rice is a Canadian linguist. She specializes in research on Slavey, an indigenous language spoken in Canada's Northwest Territories, and has long been involved in maintaining and revitalizing the language.
Rice earned her PhD in 1976. She is a professor of linguistics and serves as the Director of the Centre for Aboriginal Initiatives at the University of Toronto. Well known for her work in both theoretical and Native American linguistics, Rice is working on a comparative grammar of Athapaskan languages that will detail the phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics as well as the lexicon of these languages. In addition, as a Canadian Research Chair, she researches markedness, contrast and complexity in phonology. On this topic she is working on a book to evaluate the diagnostics that have been proposed to determine markedness and to examine phonological patterning.
Rice served as president of the Canadian Linguistic Association from 1998 to 2002 and served as the president of the Linguistic Society of America in 2012.

Awards and distinctions

1977. Hare Noun Dictionary. Ottawa: Northern Social Research Division, Department of Indian and Northern Affairs.
1989. E. Cook and K. Rice, Athapaskan Linguistics: Current Perspectives on a Language Family. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
1989. A Grammar of Slave. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
1992. "On deriving sonority: a structural account of sonority relationships." Phonology 9: 61—99.
1993. "A reexamination of the feature : the status of 'sonorant obstruents'." Language 69: 308–344.
1996. "Default variability: The coronal-velar relationship." Natural Language and Linguistic Theory.
2000. Morpheme Order and Semantic Scope: Word Formation in the Athapaskan Verb. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
2006. "Ethical issues in linguistic fieldwork: An overview." Journal of Academic Ethics.