Fritz Juengling

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The Origin of the English Pronoun she
Juengling's work on the English pronoun 'She' posited that the word is most likely English in origin. Anatoly Liberman used Juengling's research on 'She' in his book Word Origins...And How We Know Them: Etymology for Everyone to support findings that "borrowings from Scandinavian have merged with the rest of English vocabulary." Liberman further utilized Juengling's work in the book A Bibliography of English Etymology, Volumes 1-2, co-written with Ari Hoptman and released in 2010.
Acta Philosophica, "an authoritative international academic press since 1928 and Italy's foremost publisher of scholarly journals", has also used Juengling's research on 'she'.
The Origins of the Southern Hemisphere Accents of English
The Origins of the Southern Hemisphere Accents of English, published in 1999, was a 210-page book written by Juengling focusing on dialects in the Southern Hemisphere for his doctoral thesis at the University of Minnesota. As Juengling's doctoral advisor, Liberman oversaw the completion of the work. Alexander Hugo Schulenburg utilized The Origins of the Southern Hemisphere Accents of English in his work St Helena, Ascension Island, and Tristan da Cunha.
Other
Juengling's work has been referenced by sociolinguist Peter Trudgill and in Arnold Zwicky's work as well.
Juengling has contributed to or had his work used in a number of projects, some of which include: The Family Tree German Genealogy Guide: How to Trace Your Germanic Ancestry in Europe; Focus on the USA, edited by Edgar W. Schneider (of Schneider's dynamic model); Foreign Language Program Articulation: Current Practice and Future Prospects; Dictionaries: Journal of the Dictionary Society of North America; Do You Want to Come With?: A Cross-dialectal, Multi-field, Variationist Investigation of with as Particle Selected by Motion Verbs in the Minnesota Dialect of English by John M. Spartz; Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts: LLBA; and others.
Personal
Before moving to Bountiful, Utah, in 2011, Juengling taught German at Sprague High School in Salem, Oregon. In 2007, he was a nominee of the Crystal Apple Award, given to educators who "exceed all expectations of their profession and who engage community in their work." As of 2014, he works at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Family History Center, where he is an International Research Team Supervisor and a German and Dutch specialist.
He is the maternal nephew of Sybil Gibson Higley, with his mother Lavona and Sybil being sisters.
 
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