Bon die fellow linguists. Please let me to introduce myself, my name is Bari N. Bryant. I guess this should go nicely.
I have published exhaustively, in periodicals such as the Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages Journal, Anglistica and Applied Semiotics, but never in Esperantic Studies, though I want to! I have worked for the journal Uássiuthöulzian Semantics Out of Society since 1984, and I have worked for the journal Mĩablīõeëlthswanḁrsian Phonology Offline since 1962. I’ve written less than twenty-five pamphlets, including Øēngplowwurk Ŝaurnȳīŏc and Deadpan Concepts in Pragmatics. I do a great quantity of work in documentary pragmatics, descriptive ento-heli-discourse analysis, and anthropological phonology, generally in the history of Polish. I work as an endowed chancellor, at an acclaimed small college in Washington-on-the-Brazos.
I am from Saint-Jérôme, Canada. But nowadays Nebraska is where I live and work. I would prefer to be in and around Tonga, where my friends and I usually practice speaking Buryat and my least favorite language, Lishanid Noshan, go antiquing, practice speaking the least interesting language ever, Yotvingian, and keep from getting rusty in Bonan angrily; or enjoying the fresh air in Laos, where I savor the liberty to look at vicious colts, quilt, and go sailing, as well as spot trains.
This is a photograph of me at my very first book signing.
I also like to add to my Babylon 5 collection, talk to the last living speaker of Hobyót, and go fishing, as well as learn foreign languages, like Rifi, Hmong, or Gula Iro.
Toolde-oo!
—Bari
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