Linguistics Research

Books

  • XP-Adjunction in Universal Grammar: Scrambling and Binding in Hindi-Urdu. Richard Kayne (ed.)Oxford Studies in Comparative Syntax. New York: Oxford University Press. 2000.
  • Linguistic Structure and Language Dynamics in South Asia. Anvita Abbi, R.S. Gupta, Ayesha Kidwai (eds.). Motilal Banarsidas, 2001.
  • 2014-2019: Senior Editor, Oxford Research Encyclopaedia, Linguistics. 
    2019–: Member, Advisory Board, Oxford Research Encyclopaedia, Linguistics.

Select articles/ talks/ handouts in Linguistics

Articles under submission (to appear 2025)

  • The Linguistic Survey of India: The Prequel. Book chapter, in Rama Kant Agnihotri edited Census, Survey and Policy. In the series People’s Linguistic Survey of India, Orient Blackswan. 
  • Universal Grammar and early childhood education: Towards a synergy. Book chapter, in Minati Panda, Suneeta Mishra, and Judit Baranyi edited From Principles to Praxis: How linguistic theories interact with language learning and pedagogy

2025

  • On Hindi Diwas, Thoughts on What Hindi Was, and Is, Raiot
  • A Blast from the Past: Examining the LSI Archive for Some Cautionary Notes about Shared Features. Talk given at ILAESFALF, Jawaharlal Nehru University . 
  • Counting Languages in India:  The Afterlife of the Linguistic Survey of India (1896-1928) in the Indian Censuses. Talk given at Gitam (Deemed) University, Bengaluru campus . 

2024

  • A Case for Language Acquilearning (jointly with Benu Pareek and Yangchen Roy, at the SAFAL 2024 conference.  
  • From Counting Languages to Counting on Language in India, plenary talk at the EACL1 conference. 
  • Understanding article use in comparison. Talk given at MultiED India: Delhi Teacher Training Workshop, Jawaharlal Nehru University. 
  • The rise and fall of my feminist linguistics classroom, at Teaching to Empower: Workshop on Feminist Pedagogy, O.P. Jindal Global University. 

2023

  • Imagining Language Revitalisation as Linguistic Diversity Erodes. Book review of Linguistic Diversity in South and Southeast Asia, edited by Anvita Abbi and Kapila Vatsyayan.  

2022

  • Grierson and the Linguistic Survey of India: Pre-Life and After-Life, keynote address at the SALA 36 & LSN 43 conferences. 
  • Book discussion on Hinglish Live📹
  • Labeling vP: Objects and Expletives in Hindi-Urdu, keynote talk at the GLOW in Asia XIII 2022 Online Specialconference. 
  • Panelist, on the discussion of the book Linguistic Diversity in South and Southeast Asia, edited by Anvita Abbi and Kapila Vatsyayan (video). 📹
  • Child language acquisition: Cross-linguistic evidence for Universal Grammar. Co-authored with Benu Pareek and Yangchen Roy. In Rama Kant Agnihotri and Rajesh Kumar edited Language, Mind, Society: A Reader for Students of Language and Education, pp. 54-70. Orient BlackSwan. 
  • Unlabeled structures and scrambling asymmetries: Hindi-Urdu style. In Samir Alam, Yash Sinha and Sadhwi Srinivas edited Proceedings of (F)ASAL-11, Formal Approaches to South Asian Languages 2022. 
  • Language identity and language endangerment: Some thoughts on dealing with India’s linguistic diversity. Department of Linguistics and English, University of Jaffna (online), February 21. 

2021

  • Imagining the multilingual university, Social Text 39.4(149), pp.110-11. 
  • Being Janus: Some thoughts on the papers by Agnihotri, Heugh, Panda and Shahani. Panel discussion on Education and Inequality: Historical and Contemporary Trajectories, Orient Blackswan, October 1. 📹

2020

  • Life to Indian Languages: A linguist responds to Javed Majeed’s study of Grierson’s Linguistic Survey of India. Economic and Political Weekly, 55.42, pp.40-48. 
  • Doubling back: Santali pronominal incorporation and clitic doubling. Centre for Applied Linguistics & Translation Studies web-talk series Syntax-Semantics: Theoretical insights and Applications for Indian languages, University of Hyderabad, August 26. 📹

2019

  • Urdu (encyclopaedia entry). In Jack S. Damico and Martin J. Ball (eds.) SAGE Encyclopedia of Human Communication Sciences and Disorders
  • Leftward vs. rightward syntactic movement: The evidence from Hindi- Urdu. International Symposium on Formal Linguistics, School of Foreign Studies, South China Normal University, Guangzhou, China. 27 November. 
  • The People’s Linguistic Survey of India volumes: Neither linguistics, nor a successor to Grierson’s LSI, but still a point of referenceSocial Change, 49.1, pp.154-159. 
  • What we know we don’t know about the acquisition of language? A dialogue between generative and cultural-cognitive approach to language acquisition and language pedagogy. Zakir Hussain Centre for Educational Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. 29 March. 

2018

  • COMP-Lex Subordination: A theoretical account of SAY based complementisers. Plenary talk at  South Asia in Generative Grammar: A Workshop in Memory of Alice Davison and James Gair, at SALA 34, University of Konstanz, Germany, June 20 (slides) 

2017

  • Languages or mother tongues? India’s linguistic diversity. In JNUTA edited What the Nation Really Needs to Know: The JNU Nationalism Lectures, pp. 40-48. HarperCollins India (prefinal version). 
  • Fetishizing (Linguistic) Diversity: Some reflections on the Indian Instance. XXVII Congress of the International Federation of Languages and Literatures, India International Centre, New Delhi, March 15. 

2016

  • The question of language in education. Economic and Political Weekly, 51.35 pp.40-43. 
  • Introduction to the formal syntax, semantics, and morphology of South Asian languages (edited with Emily Manetta); special issue of Linguistic Analysis, 40 (3-4). 
  • Verb agreement in Hindi and its acquisition (jointly with Benu Pareek and Sonja Eisenbeiss). Journal of South Asian Languages, Rahul Balusu and Sandhya Sundaresan edited Proceedings of FASAL-5, pp. 196-215. 
  • The Core Hindi Case-Markers. Hindi Language and Linguistics 3, Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales, Paris, September 14. 

2015

  • Recovering hybrid histories in cosmopolitan spaces. In Rama Kant Agnihotri, Claudia Benthem, and Tatiana Orenskaia edited “Impure languages”: linguistic and literary hybridity in contemporary cultures, pp. 234-255. Orient Blackswan. 
  • The Acquisition of Verb Agreement in Hindi (joint work with Sonja Eisenbeiss and Benu Pareek). Rutgers Centre for Cognitive Science, 8 Sept. 

2014

  • The linguistics and politics of mixed codes. Hinglish workshop, Sarai, CSDS, and SOAS. 🔊,
  • Why say that: Say-based complementizers and their Extended Projections: The evidence from Bangla and MeiteilonFormal Approaches to South Asian Languages 4, University of Rutgers, New Brunswick, March 29. 
  • Knowing the world through language (and laughter). Workshop on Language Description and Sciences, KMI institute of Hindi and Linguistics, Dr. Bhim Rao Ambedkar University Agra, August 8. 

2013

  • Chomsky’s Innateness Hypothesis: Implications for Language Learning and TeachingLanguage and Language Teaching, 2.1, pp 57-61. 
  • Remarks on A Grammar of the Great Andamanese Language: An Ethnolinguistic Study by Anvita Abbi. Jawaharlal Nehru University, November 7. 
  • EX-It: On the syntax of finite clause extraposition and pronominal correlates in Hindi and Bangla. Dept. of Linguistics, Massachussetts Institute of Technology, April 25. 

2012

  • Hindi-Urdu -wala: Just a Description. Ms. 
  • Merge and Extrapose: Scrambling and Wh-construal of Hindi,Bangla and Malayalam finite complements. Department of Linguistics, University College London, March 7. 

2011

  • The case for Hindustani revisited. In Imtiaz Hasnain and Shrees Chaudhury edited Problematizing Language Studies: Cultural, Theoretical and Applied Perspective (Essays in Honour of Rama Kant Agnihotri), pp. 160-168. Aakar Books. 
  • Unaccusativity Lite: Deadjectival Predication in Hindi-UrduWorkshop on Complex Predicates in South Asian LanguagesICON 2011, IIT Madras, Chennai. 
  • Cutting Edge(s): Clausal complements, extraposition, and wh-movement in Hindi and BanglaGLOW in Asia Workshop for Young Scholars Mie University, Japan, September 7. 
  • Towards an adpositional analysis of Hindi Layer II Case particles: Some Remarks on -se and –koEssex JNU-Konstanz Workshop on Case and Elicitation Techniques, Department of Linguistics, University of Essex, June 14. 
  • Remarks on Tariq Rahman’s From Hindi to Urdu. Centre for Linguistics, Jawahalarlal Nehru University, February 24. 

2010

  • The cartography of phases. In Anna-Maria di Scuillo and Virginia Hill edited Edges in Syntax, pp. 233–262, John Benjamins. 
  • Morphological case is structural: The Case of Hindi accusative –ko. In Universals and Variation, Beijing Language and Culture University Press. 

2008

  • Knowledge of language: Noam Chomsky’s ideas of innateness. Contemporary Education Dialogue, 5.2, pp. 245-265. 
  • Review of GDS Anderson’s The Munda Verb: Typological Perspectives. In Rajendra Singh edited Annual Review of South Asian Languages and Linguistics 2008, pp. 267-72. Mouton de Gruyter. 
  • Managing multilingual IndiaThe Marxist XXIV.2, pp. 1-7. 
  • The morphosyntax of classifier systems in Indian languages. Computational Grammatical Models for Indian Languages, Indian Institute of Information Technology, Hyderabad, June 10. 

2007

  • Review of Rama Kant Agnihotri’s Hindi: An Essential Grammar. In Rajendra Singh edited Annual Review of South Asian Languages and Linguistics 2007, pp.149-55. Mouton de Gruyter. 
  • Mind, Knowledge and MoralityCognition & Learning: Theory & Practice, Vidya Bhawan Society, Udaipur, October 6. 

2006

  • Root and Embedded Left Peripheries: Evidence from Malayalam and Meiteilon (with Rosmin Mathew). Interface Legibility at the Edge, University of Bucharest, June 27. 
  • Relating to Relatives: The Cyclicity of SIMPL (with Rosmin Mathew). Interphases, University of Bucharest, May 19. 
  • Missing the forest for the trees: Malayalam and English relatives (with Rosmin Mathew) Proceedings of MSPIL’06, pp. 196-215. IIT Bombay.  

2005

  • The topic interpretation in Universal Grammar.  In Anoop Mahajan and Veneeta Dayal edited Clause Structure in South Asian Languages, pp.253-289. Mouton de Gruyter 
  • Santali Backernagel clitics. In Rajendra Singh and Tanmoy Bhattacharya edited The Yearbook of South Asian Languages, pp.189–207. Mouton de Gruyter. 
  • The finest structure of the left periphery: Complementizers and Interrogation in Hindi, Malayalam, Sinhala & Meiteilon (with Rosmin Mathew). V Asian GLOW, Jawaharlal Nehru University, October 5. 

2004

  • Whose language is Urdu? Heidelberg Papers in South Asian and Comparative Politics 24. 

1999

  • Word order and focus positions in Universal Grammar. In Georges Rebuschi and Laurie Tuller edited The Grammar of Focus, pp.213–245. John Benjamins. 

1995

  • Binding and Free Word Order Phenomena in Hindi and Urdu. PhD dissertation.