Henriette Gezundhajt

Henriette Gezundhajt (born March 25, 1963) is a professor of French linguistics at Glendon College and York University.[1]

Gezundhajt was born in France and studied Enunciative Linguistics at the University Paris 7 until 1988. She received her Ph.D. in French linguistics from the University of Toronto in 1995 and has taught at several universities in Toronto, including Ryerson University, York University and U of T.[2] She specializes in the morphology of adverbs and her work has been cited in various journals and books such as Structure du Français Moderne by Pierre Léon and Parth Bhatt.[3] She has created several websites dedicated to the study of linguistics. Among them, "Sur Les Sentiers de La Linguistique" offers a comprehensive introductory guide to French linguistics.[4] She is also a licensed hypnotherapist and has written on the evolution of the historical origins of hypnotism.[5]

References

  1. "Henriette Gezundhajt". York University Faculty Profile.
  2. "Henriette's Home Page". Computing in the Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Toronto.
  3. Léon, Pierre; Bhatt, Parth (2005). Structure du français moderne: Introduction à l'analyse linguistique (in French) (3rd ed.). Canadian Scholars’ Press. pp. 159, 268. ISBN 978-1551302423.
  4. "La linguistique". Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) (in French).
  5. Gezundhajt, Henriette (2007). "An evolution of the historical origins of hypnotism prior to the twentieth century: between spirituality and subconscious". Contemporary Hypnosis. 24 (4): 178–194. doi:10.1002/ch.341.
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