David E. Watters

David E. Watters, Ph.D., was a Tibeto-Burman linguist and institute folklorist.

Education

Watters, of Port Angeles, Washington, holds a Diploma from Prairie Bible Institute, Canada, 1967; M.A. Degree, University of Oregon, 1996; Ph.D. University of Oregon, 1998.[1]

Career

He was adjunct faculty at the University of Oregon,[2] Eugene, Oregon and was a visiting scholar at Tribhuvan University from 2001 to 2006,[3] Kathmandu, Nepal. Watters was the Director of the Oregon Summer Institute of Linguistics for four years, and was a member of SIL International.[4] Dr. Watters was considered an expert within his field, especially the Kham language, and was widely published and cited. Amongst other research in 2007 at the Research Centre for Linguistic Typology at LaTrobe University in Australia, he was working on a grammar of Kaike language, comparative study of Kiranti languages, and Himalayan languages in general[5] a previously undescribed Tibeto-Burman language.

Death

Dr. David Watters died on May 18, 2009 of an unexpected heart attack. He had recently been freed of bladder cancer when a blood clot formed in his leg and traveled to his heart. He leaves behind wife, Nancy, and two sons, Stephen and Daniel who are also researching Tibeto-Burman languages, two daughters-in-law and six grandchildren (Zach, Benjiman, Nathan, Kristina, Jesse, Maria). Dr. Watters had almost completed memoirs of his life, including his trials and adventures in the Himalayas, when he died.

Awards

1997, UO Doctoral Research Fellowships[6]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.