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Obituary for Professor Alan S. Kaye
Published/Copyright:
August 16, 2007
Abstract
It is with great sadness that I hereby inform the readers of Multilingua of the sudden and tragic death of Alan Kaye on 31st May. Alan was on research leave in the United Arab Emirates when he was diagnosed for bone cancer on 1st May. His son Jeremy, who travelled to the UAE where Alan was undergoing radiation therapy, reports that the cancer had already metastasized infecting many of his major organs. Jeremy brought his father back to the U. S. on 22nd May, where, with his immune system already gravely weakened by the therapy, he died of pneumonia nine days later.
Published Online: 2007-08-16
Published in Print: 2007-08-21
© Walter de Gruyter
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Articles in the same Issue
- Obituary for Professor Alan S. Kaye
- Introduction: Lower class language use in the 19th century
- ‘Everyday language’ in emigrant letters and its implications for language historiography – the German case
- Writing and ‘the Standard’: England, 1795–1834
- Variation in Canadian French usage from the 18th to the 19th century
- Double diglossia – lower class writing in 19th-century Finland
- Writing ability and the written language of Danish private soldiers in the Three Year's War (1848–50)
- ‘Lower class language’ in 19th century Flanders
- Book reviews