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Blair, Robert W. (Robert Wallace), 1930-2016 (Nombre personal)

Forma preferida: Blair, Robert W. (Robert Wallace), 1930-2016
Usado por/ver desde:
  • Blair, Robert Wallace, 1930-2016
  • Blair, Dr., 1930-2016

Cakchiquel basic course, 1969: title page (prepared by Robert W. Blair [and others]; drawings by Judith Levorsen)

Dr. Blair's inglés in no time, p2005: container (Dr. Robert Blair; U. of Indiana)

Mormon scholars testify, Oct. 23, 2013 (Robert W. Blair; After completing a doctorate at Indiana University with a dissertation on noun and verb morpho-syntax in Yucatec Maya, Robert W. Blair taught linguistics for many years at Brigham Young University) http://mormonscholarstestify.org/1453/robert-w-blair

In every tongue : Russian for Latter-day Saints, 1994: title page (Robert W. Blair)

Innovative approaches to language teaching, 1982: title page (Robert W. Blair, editor)

BYU Speeches, via WWW, November 18, 2019 (Robert W. Blair; Professor Robert W. Blair earned bachelor's and master's degrees in English and linguistics from BYU and his Ph. D. in the same disciplines from Indiana University in 1964; he started as a faculty member of at BYU in 1959 as founding chair of the Linguistics Department; Dr. Blair received an NDEA Title VI Award (1992-94) for the study of Quechua at Indiana University and spent a postdoctoral year as research associate in Maya at the University of Chicago; summers of linguistic fieldwork in Central and South America led to his directing language training programs for Peace Corps volunteers in Guarani, Cakchiquel, and Portuguese; his work in indigenous languages of the Americas has produced courses and dictionaries in several languages, including Navajo, Maya, Cakchiquel, and Guarani)

Daily Herald (Provo, Utah), via WWW, November 18, 2019 (February 21, 2016 edition; Robert Wallace Blair, 85, died February 19, 2016 at home; he was born on September 25, 1930 to Wallace and Gladys Marguerite Green Blair in Santa Barbara, California; he married Julia Gay Groberg on August 17, 1954 in the Idaho Falls Temple; they eventually settled in Provo, Utah; Robert was a linguist and the founding chair of BYU's Linguistics Department, where he specialized in Mayan dialects; along with his wife, he taught English in China in 1980-1981, pioneering what became BYU's Kennedy Center China Program; in 1992 they taught in Russia; later, before kidney failure required him to live in the U.S. to receive dialysis, he and Julia lived for five years in Beijing, China)

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