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March, Francis Andrew

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March, Francis Andrew (1825–1911)

US philologist. Inspired by the lectures of Noah Webster at Amherst College, he went on to teach for 49 years at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania (1855–1906), where in 1857 he was appointed to the chair of English language and philology, the first professorship of its kind. His text, A Comparative Grammar of the Anglo-Saxon Language (1870), details the Indo-European origins of the language and laid the foundation for the future study of the English language and historical grammar.

March was born in Millbury, Massachusetts. He directed the American readers for the Oxford English Dictionary during the 1870s and 1880s and he was active in the spelling reform movement. With his son, Francis Andrew March, he edited an English-language dictionary and a thesaurus.



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