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William Dwight Whitney

William Dwight Whitney (February 9, 1827 – June 7, 1894) was an American linguist, philologist, and lexicographer known for his work on Sanskrit grammar and Vedic philology as well as his influential view of language as a social institution. He was the first president of the American Philological Association and editor-in-chief of The Century Dictionary.

William D. Whitney

William Dwight Whitney

(1827-02-09)February 9, 1827

June 7, 1894(1894-06-07) (aged 67)

Linguist, philologist

Elizabeth Wooster Baldwin

  • Edwin Baldwin
  • Williston Clapp
  • Marian Parker
  • Roger Sherman Baldwin
  • Emily Henrietta
  • Margaret Dwight

Career[edit]

Whitney revised definitions for the 1864 edition of Webster's American Dictionary, and in 1869 became a founder and first president of the American Philological Association. In the same year he also became Yale's professor of comparative philology. Whitney also gave instruction in French and German in the college until 1867, and in the Sheffield scientific school until 1886.[4] He wrote metrical translations of the Vedas, and numerous papers on the Vedas and linguistics, many of which were collected in the Oriental and Linguistic Studies series (1872–74). He wrote several books on language, and grammar textbooks of English, French, German, and Sanskrit.


His Sanskrit Grammar (1879) is notable in part for the criticism it contains of the Ashtadhyayi, the Sanskrit grammar attributed to Panini. Whitney describes the Ashtadhyayi as "containing the facts of the language cast into the highly artful and difficult form of about four thousand algebraic-like rules (in the statement and arrangement of which brevity alone is had in view at the cost of distinctness and unambiguousness)."[5]


In his Course in General Linguistics in the chapter on the 'Immutability and Mutability of the Sign', Ferdinand de Saussure credits Whitney with insisting on the arbitrary nature of linguistic signs.


The linguist Roman Jakobson (Jakobson 1965, 23-4) remarks that Whitney exerted a deep influence on European linguistic thought by promoting the thesis of language as a social institution. In his fundamental books of the 1860s and 1870s, language was defined as a system of arbitrary and conventional signs. This doctrine was borrowed and expanded by Ferdinand de Saussure, and it entered into the posthumous edition of his 'Course', adjusted by his disciples C. Bally and Albert Sechehaye (1916). The teacher declares: "On the essential point it seems to us that the American linguist is right: language is a convention, and the nature of the sign that is agreed upon remains indifferent." Jakobson writes, Arbitrariness is posited as the first of two basic principles for defining the nature of the verbal sign: "The bond uniting the signifier with the signified is arbitrary." The commentary points out that no one has controverted this principle "but it is often easier to discover a truth than to assign to it the appropriate place."[6]


Although he suffered from a heart ailment in his later years, he was editor-in-chief of the first edition of the respected Century Dictionary, which appeared from 1889 to 1891.

Elected a Fellow of the in 1860.[7]

American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Elected a member of the in 1868.[8]

American Antiquarian Society

Elected foreign knight of the Prussian order for science and arts in 1881.

Pour le Mérite

, editor with Rudolf von Roth (1856–1857)

Atharva Veda

Language and the Study of Language: Twelve Lectures on the Principles of Linguistic Science (1867)

Pratisakhya, editor and translator (1868)

Taittiriya

A Compendious German Grammar (1869, 6th edn. 1888)

On Material and Form in Language (1872)

Oriental and Linguistic Studies — First Series: The Veda, The Avesta, The Science of Language (1872)

Oriental and Linguistic Studies — Second Series: The East and West, Religion and Mythology, Hindu Astronomy (1874)

Darwinism and Language (1874)

The Life and Growth of Language: An Outline of Linguistic Science (1875)

Essentials of English Grammar for the Use of Schools (1877)*

(1879, 2d edn. 1889)

Sanskrit Grammar: Including Both the Classical Language, and the Older Dialects, of Veda and Brahmana

Language and its Study: with Special Reference to the Indo-European (lectures) (1880)*

Logical Consistency in Views of Language (1880)

Mixture in Language (1881)

A Brief German Grammar (1885)

The Roots, Verb-forms and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language (supplement to Sanskrit Grammar) (1885)

Practical French Grammar (1887)*

A Compendious German and English Dictionary (1887)*

The Century Dictionary (editor) (1889–1891)

Introductory French Reader (1891)*

Max Müller and the Science of Language: A Criticism (1892)

Atharva Veda Samhita 3 volumes (translator)

The History of Sanskrit Grammar (Indian reprint edition of Sanskrit Grammar)

Manuscript Diary (photo reprint)

(9 March 2005). William Dwight Whitney and the Science of Language. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8020-9.

Stephen G. Alter

, ed. (1911). "Whitney, William Dwight" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 611–612.

Chisholm, Hugh

John Earl Joseph (1 January 2002). . From Whitney to Chomsky: Essays in the History of American Linguistics. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 19–47. ISBN 90-272-4592-4.

"'The American Whitney' and his European Heritages and Legacies"

at the Database of Classical Scholars

William Dwight Whitney

(1895). William Dwight Whitney. Yale University. p. 28.

Seymour, Thomas Day

William Dwight Whitney, (1827–1894), Whitney Research Group

William Dwight Whitney

William Dwight Whitney at Yale

American National Biography Online of William Dwight Whitney

The Descendants of John Whitney, pp. 486–490.

Full biography : Lanman, C. R. (1898). "Appendix III.: Chronological Bibliography of the Writings of William Dwight Whitney". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 19: 121–150. :10.2307/592466. JSTOR 592466.

doi

gratis online and they are "planning a CD version".

The Century Dictionary

Judith Ann Schiff, "", Yale Alumni Magazine, March/April 2010 (description of life and career).

Advice for the language-lorn

William Dwight Whitney family papers (MS 555). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.

[1]

Guide to the Marian Parker Whitney Papers, 1842–1945 (bulk 1871–1945)