Hook was born in southwestern Connecticut and attended public and private school in northeastern Ohio. He graduated from Harvard College in 1964[2] and went to India as a member of the American Peace Corps before earning his PhD in Indo-Aryan linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania. He is married to Prof. Hsin-hsin Liang who directs the Chinese language program at the University of Virginia. They have a daughter Leise and a son Lawrence.
Academic work
Hook's academic interest has been in the linguistic description of languages belonging to the
Indo-Aryan family in South Asia, and more broadly in their place in Masica's Indo-Turanian linguistic area. At Michigan, he taught
Hindi at all levels, occasionally other South Asian languages, along with courses in linguistics and South Asian literature for three and a half decades, and published on both Indo-Aryan languages and linguistics.
His chief contributions are The Compound Verb in Hindi and numerous articles on the compound verb and other syntactic and semantic phenomena in western Indo-Aryan languages and dialects spoken in
North India,
West India, and
Pakistan:
Kashmiri,
Marathi,
Gujarati,
Rajasthani,
Shina, and
Sanskrit. After
Jules Bloch in his La Formation de la Langue Marathe,[3] Hook was the first to realize that Kashmiri, not unlike
German, has
V2 word order.[4] More recent publications have refined the notion of South Asia as a
linguistic area[5] as first adumbrated by
Murray Emeneau[6] and - with the addition of Central Asia and Eastern Asia - expanded by
Colin Masica.[7]
Publications
Semantic neutrality in complex predicates in East and South Asian languages. (with Prashant Pardeshi and Hsin-Hsin Liang). In Linguistics 50: 605-632.
Searching for the Goddess: A study of sensory and other impersonal causative expressions in the Shina of Gilgit. (with Muhammad Amin Zia). Yearbook of South Asian Languages and Linguistics 2005. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. pp 165–188.
ISBN978-3110186185
Where do Compound Verbs Come from? And where are they Going?. In Bhaskararao, P., and K.V. Subbarao, Eds. South Asia yearbook 2001: Papers from the symposium on South Asian languages: contact, convergence and typology. Delhi: SAGE Publications. Pp. 101–30.
The compound verb in Chinese and Hindi-Urdu and the plausibility of macro linguistic areas. (with Hsin-hsin Liang). In Old and New Perspectives on South Asian Languages: Grammar and Semantics, Colin Masica, Ed. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 105–126.
ISBN978-8120832084
Kesar of Layul: A Central Asian Epic in the Shina of Gultari. In Studies in Pakistani Popular Culture. Wm. Hanaway and Wilma Heston, Eds. Lahore: Sang-e-Meel and Lok Virsa. pp. 121–183.
ISBN978-9693507027
The Emergence of Perfective Aspect in Indo-Aryan. In Approaches to Grammaticalization. Vol. 2. B. Heine and E. Traugott, Eds. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins. pp. 59–89.
ISBN902722899X, 9789027228994
A Note on Expressions of Involuntary Experience in the Shina of Skardu. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 53:77-82.
The Marriage of Heroines and the Definition of a Literary Area in South and Central Asia. In Aryan and Non-Aryan in India, M. M. Deshpande and P. E. Hook, Eds., Karoma. 1979. pp. 35–54.
ISBN978-0891480457
Linguistic Areas: Getting at the Grain of History. In Festschrift for Henry Hoenigswald, On the Occasion of his Seventieth Birthday. George Cardona and Norman H. Zide, Eds. Tuebingen: Gunter Narr Verlag. pp. 155–168.
ISBN3878083653, 9783878083658
Hindi Structures: Intermediate Level. Ann Arbor: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan. 1979.
ISBN9780891480167
The Compound Verb in Hindi. Ann Arbor: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan. 1974.
ISBN978-0891480518
^Bloch, Jules (1914). La Formation de le Langue Marathe.
^Hook (1976): Is Kashmiri an SVO language? Indian Linguistics 37: 133-142.
^See Hook (1987): Linguistic Areas: Getting at the Grain of History in Festschrift for Henry Hoenigswald, George Cardona and Norman H. Zide, Eds. Pp. 155-68.
^Emeneau, M. (1956). India as a Linguistic Area. Language 32: 3–16.
^Masica, Colin P. (1976). Defining a Linguistic Area: South Asia. University of Chicago Press.
External links
Competition between vectored verbs and factored verbs (複合動詞における Vector 動詞と Factor 動詞の競合について)
[1]
Manetta, Emily. 2011. Peripheries in Kashmiri and Hindi-Urdu: The Syntax of Discourse-driven Movement. John Benjamins.
[2]