Dr. Txuss Martin

Instructor

Build a Statement of Purpose

Generate a tailored SOP for Dr. Txuss Martin. Improve your application with a focused, well-structured draft.

Biography

Txuss Martin is an affiliated lecturer at the University of Cambridge, specializing in Theoretical Applied Linguistics. He received his PhD in Linguistics from New York University in 2012, with a dissertation titled 'Deconstructing Romance Object Clitics,' supervised by the esteemed Professor Richard Kayne. Prior to his current role, Dr. Martin worked as a postdoctoral researcher on the Language & Mental Health project at the University of Durham, where he investigated the relationship between language and consciousness. He graduated with a degree in Linguistics and Philosophy from the University of Barcelona in 2004 and later pursued a Master's degree in Cognitive Science and Language. His research interests encompass various facets of Linguistics and Philosophy, focusing particularly on the syntax-semantics-pragmatics interface and the internal structure of Romance and Germanic languages. Dr. Martin is also deeply interested in the implications of grammar for cognition and consciousness, contributing to ongoing discussions in the field of UnCartesian linguistics.

Research Interests

Requirements for University of Cambridge

Master Program
Requirements
GPA Requirement
Required:3.7
IELTS
Listening
Required:7
Reading
Required:7
Writing
Required:7
Speaking
Required:7
Overall
Required:7.5
TOEFL
Listening
Required:25
Reading
Required:25
Writing
Required:25
Speaking
Required:25
Total
Required:110
Prerequisites
UK Bachelor's Degree with good Upper Second Class Honours or international equivalent Background in international relations, politics, law, economics, security or history is a definite asset
Application Checklist
  • Two academic references
  • Official transcripts
  • CV/Resume
  • Personal statement (approx 500 words)
  • Research proposal (1-2 pages/500 words)
  • Application fee (£50)
Specialization Notes

Standard postgraduate requirements for Department of Politics and International Studies (POLIS) and related humanities departments.