Mark Hale


Mark Hale is an American linguistics professor now teaching at Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He studies the methodology of historical linguistics as well as theoretical linguistics, Indo-European and Austronesian linguistics.
He is a prominent figure in these fields. He has published numerous scholarly articles and books on his research. Along with colleague Charles Reiss, he is a proponent of substance-free phonology, the idea that phonetic substance is inaccessible to phonological computation.

Selected publications

Hale, M., Historical linguistics: Theory and method, Oxford, Blackwell
Hale, M., & Reiss, C.,, Oxford: Oxford University Press
Hale, M., Kissock, M., & Reiss, C. An I-Language Approach to Phonologization and Lexification. Chapter 20.
The Oxford Handbook of Historical Phonology.
Edited by Patrick Honeybone and Joseph Salmons
Hale, M.. Diachronic syntax. Syntax, 1, 1-18.
Hale, M., Neogrammarian Sound Change, Chapter 7 in The Handbook of Historical Linguistics, Edited by: Brian D. Joseph and Richard D. Janda, Blackwell
Mark Hale & Charles Reiss Substance abuse and dysfunctionalism: Current trends in phonology. Linguistic Inquiry 31: 157-169.