Dr. Patrick N. Kanampiu, PhD

 

Lecturer

Education Background

LevelQualification NameInstitutionYear
PhDMaster of Arts in English language and LinguisticsUniversity of Edinburgh2025
MasterEnglish & LinguisticsChuka University2017
Bachelor

Bachelor of Education Arts

(English & Literature)

Kenyatta University2009

Appointments/ Related Experience

PeriodInstitutionPosition
August 2025 – To dateTharaka UniversityLecturer
January 2025 – To dateTharaka UniversityField Attachment Coordinator (Humanities)
 2019-2021; October 2024- To dateTharaka UniversitySection Head (English & Linguistics)
 2019-August 2025Tharaka UniversityAssistant Lecturer of English & Linguistics
 2023-2024 University of EdinburghTutor

Invited Talks

Kanampiu, P. (2024). Differential preference in the choice of nominal classification
rules in kˆıˆıtharaka. Talk given at Centre for language Evolution (CLE) talk series at
The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Kanampiu, P., Alexander, M., and Culbertson, J. (2023). A theory of morphological
productivity is essential in characterizing noun classes: corpus and experimental ev
idence from Bantu. Talk given at This Time for Africa (TTFA) talk series at Leiden
University, Netherlands.
Kanampiu, P. (2022). Morphophonological and semantic productivity of Kˆıˆıtharaka
noun classes. Talk given at Meaning and grammar (MGRG) talk series at The
University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom.

Book Chapters

 Kanampiu, P. and van der Wal, J. (2025). The expression of information structure
in Kˆıˆıtharaka. In The expression of information structure in Bantu, Contemporary
African Linguistics. Language Science Press, Berlin
van der Wal, J., Asiimwe, A., Kanampiu, P., Kerr, E., Lusekelo, A., Nhantumbo, N.,
and Nshemezimana, E. (2025). On the expression of information structure in Bantu.
In The expression of information structure in Bantu. Language Science Press

Journal Articles

Kanampiu, P., Martin, A., and Culbertson, J. (2025). Experimental evidence for
semantic and morphophonological productivity in Kˆıˆıtharaka noun classes. Glossa
psycholinguistics, 4(1):1–45.
Kanampiu, P., Martin, A., and Culbertson, J. (2025). Semantic and morphophono
logical productivity in Kˆıˆıtharaka gender system: A quantitative study. Glossa: a
journal of General Linguistics, 10(1):1–33
 Saldana, C., Kanampiu, P., and Culbertson, J. (In Press). Gender comes first:
Experimental evidence for the representation of gender closer to the noun stem than
number across linguistic populations
 Martin, A., Adger, D., Abels, K., Kanampiu, P., and Culbertson, J. (2024). A
universal cognitive bias in word order: Evidence from speakers whose language goes
against it. Psychological Science, 35(3):304–311.
J Kerr, E., Asiimwe, A., Kanampiu, P., Li, Z., Nshemezimana, E., and van der Wal,
J. (2023). Bantu word order between discourse and syntactic relations. Linguistique
et langues africaines, (9 (1)).
 Kanampiu, P. and Muriungi, P. (2019). Order of modifiers in Kˆıˆıtharaka determiner
phrase. International Journal on Studies in English Language and Literature, pp.
11–21
 Kanampiu, P. (2024). Expression of referents in Kˆıˆıtharaka. Studies in African
Linguistics, 53(2):120–140.

 Conference Presentations

Kanampiu, P., Asiimwe, A., Lusekelo, A., Nshemezimana, E., and van der Wal, J.(2023). Functional propertes of the particle-o in four bantu languages. Joint talkpresented during BaSiS Conference at Leiden University, Netherlands. [slides]
 Kanampiu, P., Alexander, M., and Culberston, J. (2024). A contest between form
and meaning: Differential preference in the choice of nominal classification rules in
Kˆıˆıtharaka. Paper presented at the 11th World Congress on African Linguistics
(WOCAL 11) Conference, The University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya [slides]
 van der wal, J. and Kanampiu, P. (2024). Kˆıˆıtharaka initial focus: revisiting the cleft
analysis. Joint talk given at World Congress on African Linguistics (WOCAL 11)
conference held at The University of Nairobi, Kenya
 Marlo, M., Mbaka, N., Kirimi, H., Kanampiu, P., Miriti, E., and Ntalala, S. (2024).
Collaborative research in meru linguistics. Talk given at World Congress on African
Linguistics (WOCAL 11) conference held at The University of Nairobi, Kenya
 Asiimwe, A., Kanampiu, P., and van der wal, J. (2023). Information structure in
Eastern Bantu languages. Joint talk given at Language Association of East Africa
Bantu Syntax and Information (LAEA 3) conference held at Makerere University,
Kampala
 Kanampiu,P., Alexander, M., and Culberston, J. (2023). Semantic and morphophono
logical productivity in Kˆıˆıtharaka noun classes. Joint talk given at Language Asso
ciation of East Africa Bantu Syntax and Information (LAEA 3) conference held at
Makerere University, Kampala [slides]
Kerr, E., Asiimwe, A., Kanampiu, P., Li, Z., Nshemezimana, E., and van der wal,
J. (2023). Bantu word order between discourse and syntactic relations. Joint talk
given at Bantu Syntax and Information Structure (BaSiS) conference held at Leiden
University, Netherlands.
 Kanampiu, P., Alexander, M., and Culberston, J. (2022). Determinants of noun
classification in Kˆıˆıtharaka: a synchronic approach. Paper presentad at the 9th con
ference on Bantu linguistics (Bantu 9), Malawi University of Science and Technology,
Blantyre, Malawi.. [slides]
 Asiimwe, A., Kanampiu, P., Kerr, E., Lusekelo, A., and van der Wal, J. (2021).
Bantu word order from discourse to syntactic relations. Joint talk given at Annual
Conference on African Linguistics (ACAL) held in Florida, United States.
 Kanampiu, P., Asiimwe, A., Lusekelo, A., Nshemezimana, E., and van der Wal, J.
(2023). Functional propertes of the particle-o in four bantu languages. Joint talk
presented during BaSiS Conference at Leiden University, Netherlands. [slides]

Awards, Honours & Grants

University of Edinburgh, College of Arts and Humanities PhD Scholarships 2020,
(Full fees and stipends)
CODESRIA Grant, 2023. Meru Tonal dialectology Project (A collaborative Re
search Project with Prof. Nancy Mbaka (Chuka University), Prof. Humprey Kirimi
(Chogoria Campus), Dr. Safari Ntalala (Karatina University, Dr. Gervasio Miriti
(Turkana University) and Prof. Michael Marlo (University of University of Missouri,
USA), ($50,000)
Partnership Fund Research Grant (CO-PI). Language context and attitudes among
Kˆıˆıtharaka speakers in Kenya, (£17,893.333)

Research Interests

Language acquisition and change
Learning biases
Language typology
Experimental approaches to language research
Theoretical syntax and morphology
Artificial language learning and grammaticality judgments