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Difference between revisions of "User:Mark Nartey"

 
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A budding academic, Mark Nartey holds a Bachelor of Arts (First Class) degree in English and Linguistics from the University of Cape Coast (UCC), Ghana where he obtained both the overall best graduating English and Faculty of Arts student awards.
 
A budding academic, Mark Nartey holds a Bachelor of Arts (First Class) degree in English and Linguistics from the University of Cape Coast (UCC), Ghana where he obtained both the overall best graduating English and Faculty of Arts student awards.
  
Currently, he is a graduate student of Linguistics at the Department of Language and Literature in the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), and has a number of papers in peer-reviewed journals.
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Currently, he is a postgraduate student of Linguistics at the Department of Language and Literature in the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), and has a number of papers in peer-reviewed journals.
  
His areas of specialization include academic communication, English for Specific Purposes (ESP), applied linguistic theory, lexical functional grammar and (head-driven) phrase-structure grammar. He speaks and writes Ga, a language spoken in Southern Ghana, fluently.
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His areas of specialization include non-truth conditional semantics, applied linguistic theory, (critical) discourse analysis and corpus linguistics. He speaks and writes Ga (Niger-Congo, Kwa branch), a language spoken in Southern Ghana, fluently.

Latest revision as of 21:58, 11 November 2014

A budding academic, Mark Nartey holds a Bachelor of Arts (First Class) degree in English and Linguistics from the University of Cape Coast (UCC), Ghana where he obtained both the overall best graduating English and Faculty of Arts student awards.

Currently, he is a postgraduate student of Linguistics at the Department of Language and Literature in the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), and has a number of papers in peer-reviewed journals.

His areas of specialization include non-truth conditional semantics, applied linguistic theory, (critical) discourse analysis and corpus linguistics. He speaks and writes Ga (Niger-Congo, Kwa branch), a language spoken in Southern Ghana, fluently.