International Linguistics Olympiad

The International Linguistics Olympiad (IOL) is one of the International Science Olympiads for secondary school students. Its abbreviation IOL is deliberately chosen not to correspond to the name of the organization in any particular language, and member organizations are free to choose for themselves how to designate the competition in their own language.[1] This olympiad furthers the fields of mathematical, theoretical, and descriptive linguistics.

The logo of the International Linguistics Olympiad

Format edit

The setup differs from most of the other Science Olympiads, in that the olympiad contains both individual and team contests. The individual contest consists of 5 problems, covering the main fields of theoretical, mathematical and applied linguistics – phonetics, morphology, semantics, syntax, sociolinguistics, etc. – which must be solved in six hours.

The team contest has consisted of one extremely difficult and time-consuming problem since the 2nd IOL. Teams, which generally consist of four students, are given three to four hours to solve this problem.

Like nearly all International Science Olympiads, its problems are translated and completed in several languages and as such must be written free of any native language constraints. However, unlike other olympiads, the translations are provided by the multilingual Problem Committee, a body of experts independent of the delegates' team leaders. Because competitors could gain some advantage if they are familiar with one or more of the language groups which are the subject of some of the assignments, problems are increasingly based on some of the world's lesser known languages. Fortunately, with more than 6,000 languages spoken world-wide (not including so-called dead languages) there are plenty to choose from. The committee has a policy of not using artificial[contradictory] or fictional languages for its problems. The presence of an independent Problem Committee and Jury means that team leaders do not have to be experts in the field (though most are): they can (and often do) work closely with their teams, providing last-minute coaching throughout the week of the competition.

In any case, the most helpful ability is analytic and deductive thinking, as all solutions must include clear reasoning and justification.

History edit

The concept of self-sufficient linguistics problems was formulated in the 1960s, in the intellectual environment of the recently-founded Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics (OTiPL) of the Moscow State University.[2] Moscow linguists in this environment were specially interested in understanding and modelling the formal and mathematical aspects of the natural languages; they were hatching things like the meaning-text theory, the Moscow School of Comparative Linguistics and the beginnings of what later became computational linguistics.[3]

In 1963, Andrey Zaliznyak published a book called Linguistics problems (Лингвистические задачи), explaining in the introduction:

Specially crafted problems can serve as an important tool for teaching the fundamental principles and methods of linguistics. In existing collections, the material used for problems is often drawn from the facts of students' native language or the most well-known European languages. While such tasks are undoubtedly beneficial, they often suffer from the disadvantage that it is challenging to separate the linguistic task itself (which requires nothing but understanding the basic linguistic principles) from testing specific knowledge of the language under consideration. The best (though not the only) way to get rid of that second element, which doesn't directly relate to general linguistics, is to create tasks based on material from languages unfamiliar to the students. Of course, it is more challenging to craft such problems, since all the essential specific facts necessary for solving the task must somehow be presented in the problem data. However, in this case, students only need an understanding of the properties of language in general.[4]

Following the publication, the then student Alfred Zhurinsky [ru] proposed to the mathematics professor Vladimir Uspensky the creation of a high-school olympiad using such problems.

 
Poster of the First Traditional Olympiad on Linguistics, Moscow 1965

Thus, in 1965, the first edition of the Moscow's Traditional Olympiad on Linguistics and Mathematics was held, with an Organizing Committee composed by Uspensky (president), Igor Miloslavsky,[5] Alexander Kibrik and Anna Polivanova [ru]. The Problem Committee was composed by Zhurinsky (the author of most of the problems) and Zaliznyak, plus Boris Gorodetsky[6] (president), Alexandra Raskina[7] and Victor Raskin.[8][9] The Moscow Olympiad was held regularly until 1982 and resumed again in 1988, being still held nowadays.[10]

In the next decades, olympiads using the format of self-sufficient linguistics problems started to appear in different regions:

  • In 1984, professor Ruslan Mitkov founded the Bulgarian Olympiad of Mathematical Linguistics, open for high-school students of the whole Bulgaria.[10] In this olympiad, each school could participate with 4 students, thus inspiring the format of the future IOL. From 2001, the Bulgarian Olympiad also started to feature a team competition.[8]
  • From 1988 to 2000, professor Thomas E. Payne, from the University of Oregon organized a program with linguistics problems for high-school students in the city of Eugene, Oregon, United States. The format was very similar to the Moscow Olympiad, with which he had contact in 1986, when visiting the OTiPL in Moscow. From 2001 to 2006, the competition evolved into an online format, the Linguistics Challenge, which stimulated local linguistics competitions in different U.S. cities. This movement culminated, in 2007, with the creation of the North American Computational Linguistics Open Competition.[11][8]
  • In 1995, a group of professors from the Saint Petersburg State University started to organize the Traditional Olympiad of Linguistics and Mathematics of Saint Petersburg, following a format very similar to that of the Moscow Olympiad. Decades later, in the 2010s, the olympiads of Moscow and Saint Petersburg merged to form a Russian National Linguistics Olympiad.[10][8]
  • In 2001, a group connected to the Leiden University, including Ruslan Mitkov, the founder of the Bulgarian Olympiad, and two other former participants of the Moscow Olympiad (Alexander Lubotsky participated from 1973 to 1976; Leonid Kulikov participated from 1981 to 1988), founded a Linguistics Olympiad for the Netherlands.

After the foundation of the Bulgarian olympiad, teams of winners of the Moscow Linguistic Olympiad successfully competed in Bulgaria and vice versa, demonstrating good potential for international cooperation in the field. With the multiplication of initiatives, the organizers of the different olympiads decided to organize, in 2003, the First International Olympiad in Theoretical, Mathematical, and Applied Linguistics, with six participating countries:

  • Russia, with one team from the Moscow Olympiad and another from the Saint Petersburg Olympiad;
  • Bulgaria, also with two teams, both from the Bulgarian Olympiad;
  • Netherlands, with a team selected from its newly formed olympiad;
  • Estonia, with a team from the olympiad organized in the same year by Renate Pajusalu and other professors from Tartu University;
  • Latvia, with a team of students from Riga's Secondary School No 40, the former school of Alexander Berdichevsky, then a master student at the OTiPL.
  • Czech Republic, with a guest team.

Venues, year by year edit

IOL 2003 edit

The first edition of IOL then was realized from September 6 to 12, 2003, in the mountain resort Borovetz, Bulgaria, chaired by Alexander Kibrik from Moscow State University (MSU) and with the participation of six countries: Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Netherlands, and Russia.[12] The first International Jury was composed of four people: Ivan Derzhanski (president) (Institute for Mathematics and Informatics of Bulgarian Academy of Sciences), Alexander Berdichevsky (MSU), Boris Iomdin (Russian Language Institute) and Elena Muravenko (Department for Russian Language, Russian State University for the Humanities).[10] The five problems at the individual contest concerned Jacob Linzbach's "Transcendental algebra" writing system, Egyptian Arabic (Afroasiatic), Basque (Isolate), Adyghe (Northwest Caucasian), and French (Indo-European). The team contest consisted of three problems, on Tocharian (Indo-European), the use of subscripts as indices, and on performative verbs.

 
Logo of the Second International Linguistics Olympiad (2004), depicting a map of Moscow where each neighborood (rayon) is marked with a letter in some writing system and the acronym МОЛ-2 (the cyrillic acronym for 2nd IOL) follows the moskva river.

IOL 2004 edit

IOL 2 was held from August 2 to 6, 2004, in the Russian State University for the Humanities (RSUH), in Moscow, Russia.[13][14] Chaired by Vladimir Alpatov, it gathered seven countries, with the first participation of Poland and Serbia and Montenegro. The Problem Committee was chaired by Elena Muravenko; in addition to Berdichevsky, Derzhanski, and Iomdin, it also included Ksenia Gilyarova and Maria Rubinstein. The five problems at the individual contest were in Kayapo, Latin, English, Lakhota and Chuvash. The team problem was in Armenian.

IOL 2005 edit

IOL 3 was held from August 8 to 12, 2005, in Leiden, Netherlands.[15] Organized by a Local Committee composed by Alexander Lubotsky, Michiel de Vaan, Alwin Kloekhorst, Jesca Zweijtzer and Saskia Tiethoff, it had the participation of 13 teams from 9 countries, Finland and Romania for their first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Ksenia Gilyarova. The five problems at the individual contest were in Tzotzil, Lango, Mansi, Yoruba and Lithuanian. The team problem was in Figuig.

IOL 2006 edit

IOL 4 was held from August 1 to 6, 2006, at the University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia.[16] Chaired by Renate Pajusalu, it received also 13 teams from 9 countries, with Lithuania sending a team for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Alexander Berdichevsky. The five problems at the individual contest were in Lakhota (Siouan) syntax, Catalan (Romanic) plural forms, Khmer (Austroasiatic) script, Udihe (Tungusic) possessives and Ngoni (Bantu) syntax. The team problem was in American Sign Language.

IOL 2007 edit

IOL 5 was held from July 31 to August 4, 2007, at the Hotel Gelios, Saint Petersburg, Russia.[17] Chaired by Stanislav Gurevich, it received 15 teams from 9 countries; Spain, Sweden and USA came for the first time. In that year, it was decided that each country can send one or two teams, consisting of four students each, with the first team's costs fully covered by the host country. Also, the host country could send a third team.[17] The Problem Committee was chaired by Dmitry Gerasimov. The five problems at the individual contest were in Braille, Movima (Isolate), Georgian (Kartvelian), Ndom (Trans-New Guinea), and correspondences between Turkish and Tatar (Turkic). The team problem was in Hawaiian (Polynesian) and focused on genealogical terms.

IOL 2008 edit

IOL 6 was held from August 4 to 9, 2008, at the Sunny Beach Resort, Sunny Beach, Bulgaria.[18] Chaired by Iliana Raeva, it gathered 16 teams from 11 countries, including the first time for Germany, Slovenia and South Korea. The Problem Committee was chaired by Ivan Derzhanski. The five individual problems were in Micmac (Algonquian), Old Norse (North Germanic) poetry (specifically, drottkvætt), Drehu and Cemuhî correspondences (Oceanic), Copainalá Zoque (Mixe-Zoquean), and Inuktitut (Eskimo-Aleut). The team problem was about correspondences between Mandarin and Cantonese (Sinitic) using the fanqie system.

IOL 2009 edit

IOL 7 was held from July 26 to 31, 2009, at the University of Wrocław, Wrocław, Poland.[19] Chaired by Michał Śliwiński, it received 23 teams from 17 countries, with Australia, United Kingdom, India and Ireland sending teams for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Todor Tchervenkov (University of Lyon, France). The subject matter of the five individual problems covered: numerals in the Sulka language (Isolate), Maninka and Bamana (Mande) languages in the N'Ko and Latin scripts, traditional Burmese (Sino-Tibetan) names and their relation with dates of birth, stress position in Old Indic (Indo-Aryan) and the relation between grammar and morphology in classical Nahuatl (Uto-Aztecan). The team problem was in Vietnamese (Austroasiatic).

IOL 2010 edit

IOL 8 was held from July 19 to 24, 2010, at Östra Real Hostel, Stockholm, Sweden.[20] Chaired by Hedvig Skigård, it received 26 teams from 18 countries, including first time for Norway and Singapore. The Problem Committee was chaired by Alexander Piperski. The individual contest consisted of five problems covering: relations between various verb forms in Budukh (Northeast Caucasian), the Drehu (Oceanic) counting system, Blissymbolics, mRNA coding, and the connection between Sursilvan and Engadine dialects in Romansh (Western Romance). The team problem involved translating extracts from a monolingual Mongolian (Mongolic) dictionary.

IOL 2011 edit

IOL 9 was held from July 25 to 30, 2011, at the Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA.[21] Chaired by Lori Levin, it received 27 teams from 19 countries, including Brazil, Canada, United Arab Emirates and Vietnam for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Adam Hesterberg. The problems of the individual contest required reasoning about Faroese (Germanic) orthography, Menominee (Algic) morphology, Vai (Mande) syntax, Nahuatl (Uto-Aztecan) semantics and the structure of the barcode language EAN-13. The team contest involved the rules and structure of Sanskrit (Indo-Aryan) poetry.

IOL 2012 edit

IOL 10 was held from July 29 to August 4, 2012, at the University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.[22] Chaired by Mirko Vaupotic, it received 34 teams from 26 countries, first time for China, Greece, Hungary, Israel and Japan. The Problem Committee was chaired by Ivan Derzhanski. The five problems at the individual contest were in Dyirbal (Pama-Nyungan) syntax, Umbu-Ungu (Trans-New Guinea) numbers, Basque (Isolate) pronouns, Teop (Austronesian) syntax, and Rotuman (Austronesian) semantics. The team problem involved recognizing country names in Lao language (Tai-Kadai).

IOL 2013 edit

IOL 11 was held from July 22 to 26, 2013, at the Manchester Grammar School, Manchester, UK.[23] Chaired by Neil Sheldon, it received 35 teams from 26 countries, including first time teams from Isle of Man, Taiwan and Turkey. The Problem Committee was chaired by Stanislav Gurevich. The five problems at the individual contest were about Yidiny (Pama-Nyungan) morphology, Tundra Yukaghir (Yukhagir) semantics, Pirahã (Mura) phonology, Muna (Austronesian) syntax, and telepathy based on English. The team problem involved translating Martin Seymour-Smith's list of the 100 most influential books from Georgian (Kartvelian) written in the 9th century Nuskhuri script.

IOL 2014 edit

IOL 12 was held from July 21 to 25, 2014, at the Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, China – for the first time in Asian continent.[24] Chaired by Jiang Yuqin, it received 39 teams from 28 countries, with Pakistan and Ukraine sending teams for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Tae Hun Lee. The five problems at the individual contest were about Benabena (Trans-New Guinea) morphology, Kiowa (Tanoan) morphophonology, Tangut (Tibeto-Burman) kinship, Engenni (Niger-Congo) syntax, and Gbaya (Niger-Congo). The team problem involved matching the articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to their translations in Armenian (Indo-European).

IOL 2015 edit

IOL 13 was held from July 20 to 24, 2015, at the American University in Bulgaria, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria.[25] Chaired by Aleksandar Velinov, it received 43 teams from 29 countries, with Bangladesh, France and Kazakhstan sending teams for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Bozhidar Bozhanov. The five problems at the individual contest were about Nahuatl (Uto-Aztecan) and Arammba (South-Central Papuan) numbers, morphology in the Besleney dialect of Kabardian (Abkhaz-Adyghe), Soundex, Wambaya (West Barkly) syntax and the rules of Somali (Afroasiatic) poetry. The team problem involved using extracts from a monolingual Northern Sotho (Bantu) dictionary to build a grammar and lexicon of the language.

IOL 2016 edit

IOL 14 was held from July 25 to 29, 2016, at the Infosys Development Center in Mysore, India.[26] Chaired by Dr. Monojit Choudhury and Dr. Girish Nath Jha, it received 44 teams from 31 countries, with Nepal and Sri Lanka sending teams for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Boris Iomdin. The five problems at the individual contest were about spatial deictics in Aralle-Tabulahan (Austronesian), Luwian hieroglyphic script (Indo-European), Kunuz Nubian (Eastern Sudanic) morphosyntax, Iatmül (Sepik) semantics and Jaqaru (Aymaran) morphology. The team problem involved matching over 100 utterances in Taa (Tuu) to their IPA transcriptions.

IOL 2017 edit

IOL 15 was held from July 31 to August 4, 2017, at Dublin City University in Dublin, Ireland.[1] Chaired by Dr. Cara Greene, it received 43 teams from 27 countries, with Canada sending a Francophone team for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Hugh Dobbs. The five problems at the individual content were about Berom (Plateau) numbers, Abui (Timor-Alor-Pantar) possessives and semantics, Kimbundu (Bantu) morphosyntax, Jru' (Austroasiatic) written in the Khom script and Madak (Meso-Melanesian) morphophonology. The team problem involved establishing correspondences between 87 emojis and their descriptions in Indonesian (Austronesian).

IOL 2018 edit

IOL 16 was held from July 26 to 30, 2018, at the Czech University of Life Sciences in Prague, Czech Republic.[27] Chaired by Vojtěch Diatka, it received 49 teams from 29 countries, with Malaysia and Denmark competing for the first time.[28] The Problem Committee was chaired by Maria Rubinstein. The five problems at the individual contest concerned Creek (Muskogean) stress, Hakhun (Sal) morphosyntax, Terêna (Arawakan) phonology, counting in Mountain Arapesh (Torricelli) and kinship in Akan (Atlantic-Congo). The team problem examined phonological correspondences among the three languages Mẽbêngôkre, Xavante and Krĩkatí.

IOL 2019 edit

IOL 17 was held from July 29 to August 2, 2019 at the Hankuk University of Foreign Studies in Yongin, South Korea.[29] Chaired by Minkyu Kim and Yoojung Chae, it received 53 teams from 35 countries, with Hong Kong, Uzbekistan and Colombia competing for the first time.[30] This year was also the first edition of the Asia Pacific Linguistics Olympiad (APLO).[31] The Problem Committee was chaired by Tae Hun Lee. The five problems at the individual contest concerned Yonggom (Ok) morphosyntax, Yurok (Algic) colours, Middle Persian (Iranian) written in Book Pahlavi script, West Tarangan (Aru) reduplication and Nooni (Beboid) morphosyntax and day names. The team problem involved the symbol notation used by judges in rhythmic gymnastics.

IOL 2021 edit

IOL 18 was to take place from July 20 to 24, 2020, in Ventspils, Latvia. Due to the widespread COVID-19 pandemic, the International Board of the IOL decided to postpone the event to July 19 to 23, 2021, on which it was successfully held. The competition was organised remotely in the respective countries of each team, marking the first time that the mode of competition was adopted at the IOL.[32] Chaired by Vladimir Litvinsky, it received 54 teams from 34 countries, with Azerbaijan competing for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Aleksejs Peguševs [et]. The five problems at the individual contest concerned Ekari (Paniai Lakes) numerals, Zuni (Isolate) semantics with special focus on food, Kilivila (Oceanic) morphosyntax, Agbirigba (a cant language) and its derivation from the Ogbakiri dialect of Ikwerre (Atlantic-Congo), and Rikbaktsa (Macro-Jê) morphology. The team problem involved matching sentences in passages written in Garifuna (Arawakan) with its translations, as well as acknowledging the difference between the language's male and female registers and establishing their relationships with Kari'ña (Cariban) and Lokono (Arawakan), respectively.

IOL 2022 edit

IOL 19 was held from July 25 to 29, 2022 at King William's College in Castletown, Isle of Man.[33] Chaired by Rob Teare, it received 46 teams from 32 countries, with Moldova, Switzerland and Thailand competing for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Samuel Ahmed. The five problems at the individual contest concerned Ubykh (Abkhaz-Adyghe) morphophonology, the semantics and morphophonology of Alabama (Muskogean) verbs, Nǀuuki (Tuu) syntax, Arabana (Pama-Nyungan) kinship, and phonological changes and tonogenesis in two daughter languages of Proto-Chamic, Phan Rang Cham and Tsat. The team problem presented extracts in 17th and 18th century Manchu (Tungusic) from Cheong-eo Nogeoldae and the Kangxi Emperor's Imperially Commissioned Mirror of the Manchu Language for analysis, with tasks involving matching sentences in Old and Modern Manchu to their respective translations as well as writing in the Manchu script.

IOL 2023 edit

IOL 20 was held from July 24 to July 28, 2023 in Bansko, Bulgaria.[34] Chaired by Aleks Velinov, it received 51 teams from 37 countries, with Philippines competing for the first time. The Problem Committee was chaired by Milena Veneva. The five problems at the individual contest concerned Guazacapán Xinka (a language of Guatemala with now no living native speakers), Apurinã (Arawak) morphosyntax, Coastal Marind (Papuan) morphosyntax, Plains Cree (Algonquian) verb morphology and the numbering system of Supyire spoken in Mali. The team problem presented extracts from Chester S. Street's dictionary of Murrin-patha, an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by over 2,000 people in the Northern Territory.

Summary edit

The different editions of IOL can be summarized on the following table:

No. Year Location Country Dates Countries Participants Webpage Problems
1 2003 Borovets   Bulgaria September 6 September 12 6 33 Link Link
2 2004 Moscow   Russia July 31 August 2 7 43 Link Link
3 2005 Leiden   Netherlands August 8 August 12 9 50 Link Link
4 2006 Tartu   Estonia August 1 August 6 9 51 Link Link
5 2007 Saint Petersburg   Russia July 31 August 4 9 61 Link Link
6 2008 Slantchev Bryag   Bulgaria August 4 August 9 11 63 Link Archived March 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Link
7 2009 Wrocław   Poland July 26 July 31 17 86 Link Link
8 2010 Stockholm   Sweden July 19 July 24 18 99 Link Link
9 2011 Pittsburgh   United States July 24 July 30 19 102 Link Archived June 30, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Link
10 2012 Ljubljana   Slovenia July 29 August 4 26 131 Link Archived June 30, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Link
11 2013 Manchester   United Kingdom July 22 July 26 26 138 Link Archived August 29, 2017, at the Wayback Machine Link
12 2014 Beijing   China July 21 July 25 28 152 Link Link
13 2015 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria July 20 July 24 29 166 Link Archived May 19, 2017, at the Wayback Machine Link
14 2016 Mysore   India July 25 July 29 31[35] 167 Link Link
15 2017 Dublin   Ireland July 31 August 4 29 180 Link Link
16 2018 Prague   Czech Republic July 25 July 31 29 192 Link Link
17 2019 Yongin   South Korea July 29 August 2 35 209 Link Link
2020 Ventspils   Latvia Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[32]
18 2021 Ventspils   Latvia1 July 19 July 23 34 216 Link[permanent dead link] Link
19 2022 Castletown   Isle of Man July 25 July 29 32 185 Link Archived October 6, 2022, at the Wayback Machine Link
20 2023 Bansko   Bulgaria July 24 July 28 38 204 Link Link
21 2024 Brasília   Brazil Link
22 2025 Taipei   Taiwan
  1. a The competition was held remotely.

Participant countries edit

 
Countries ever participating in the IOL
  Hosts (minimum once)
  Participants

Individual medalists edit

Year Location Gold Silver Bronze
2003 Borovets, Bulgaria   Alexandra Petrova  

Boris Turovsky  
Eddin Najetović  

Mirjam Plooij  

Maria Skhapa  

Polina Oskolskaya  

Ivan Dobrev  

2004 Moscow, Russia   Ivan Dobrev  

Alexander Piperski  
Ralitsa Markova  

Maria Mamykina  

Todor Chervenkov  
Tsvetomila Mihaylova  
Tymon Słoczyński  

Alexandra Zabelina  

Xenia Kuzmina  
Alexei Nazarov  
Margus Niitsoo  
Natalja Hartsenko  
Nikita Medyankin  
Sophia Oskolskaya  

2005 Leiden, Netherlands   Ivan Dobrev  
Eleonora Glazova  
Nikita Medyankin  

Tsvetomila Mihaylova  
Alexander Piperski  
Ivaylo Grozdev  

2006 Tartu, Estonia   Maria Kholodilova  

Ivaylo Dimitrov  
Pavel Sofroniev  

Yordan Mehandzhiyski  

Eleonora Glazova  
Mihail Minkov  
Daniil Zorin  
Sergey Malyshev  
Alexander Daskalov  

Yuliya Taran  

Nikita Medyankin  
Diana Aitai  
Paweł Świątkowski  

2007 Saint Petersburg, Russia   Adam Hesterberg  

Łukasz Cegieła  

Kira Kiranova  

Mihail Minkov  
Arseniy Vetushko-Kalevich  
Sander Pajusalu  
Teele Vaalma  
Angel Naydenov  

Anna Shlomina  

Yordan Mehandzhiyski  
Elizaveta Rebrova  
Maria Kholodilova  

2008 Slanchev Bryag, Bulgaria   Alexander Daskalov  

Hanzhi Zhu  
Milan Abel Lopuhaa  

Anand Natarajan  

Maciej Janicki  
Morris Alper  
Dmitry Perevozchikov  
Łukasz Cegieła  
Andrey Nikulin  
Marcin Filar  

Guy Tabachnick  

Joon Kyu Kang  
Radosław Burny  
Diana Sofronieva  
Jeffrey Lim  
Karol Konaszyński  
Yordan Mehandzhiyski  
Rebecca Jacobs  
Tatyana Polevaya  
Georgi Rangelov  

2009 Wrocław, Poland   Diana Sofronieva  

Łukasz Cegieła  

Vitaly Pavlenko  

Andrey Nikulin  
Yordan Mehandzhiyski  
Arturs Semenyuks  
Irene Tamm  
Łukasz Kalinowski  
Witold Małecki  
Aakanksha Sarda  
Rebecca Jacobs  

Deyana Kamburova  

Szymon Musioł  
Elena Volkova  
Laura Adamson  
Alan Huang  
Ben Caller  
Tomasz Dobrzycki  
John Berman  
Jun Yeop Lee  
Sergei Bernstein  
Hye Jin Ryu  

2010 Stockholm, Sweden  
Vadim Tukh  

Andrey Nikulin  
Ben Sklaroff  

Martin Camacho  

Tian-Yi Damien Jiang  
Daria Vasilyeva  
Allen Yuan  
Aleksejs Peguševs  
Łukasz Kalinowski  
Krzysztof Pawlak  
Daniel Rucki  
Maciej Dulęba  

Mirjam Parve  

Miroslav Manolov  
Alexander Iriza  
Alan Chang  
Vitaly Pavlenko  
Artūrs Semeņuks  
Mona Teppor  
Jakob Park  
Diana Glazova  
Szymon Kanonowicz  
Roman Stasiński  
Ellen Sinot  
Younus Porteous  
Ana Pavlović  
Song Jeeun  

2011 Pittsburgh, USA  
Morris Alper  

Eva-Lotta Käsper  
Daria Vasilyeva  
Aleksey Kozlov  

Wesley Jones  

Allen Yuan  
Jekaterina Malina  
Anton Sokolov  
Alexander Wade  
Victor Valov  
Duligur Ibeling  
Paul Lau  

Min Kyu Kim  

Elena Rykunova  
Artūrs Semeņuks  
Hyun Park  
Rok Kaufman  
Vadim Tukh  
Daniel Mitropolsky  
Nik Moore  
Daniel Rucki  
Aaron Klein  
Dimitar Hristov  
Mihhail Afanasjev  
Ralf Ahi  

2012 Ljubljana, Slovenia  
Anton Sokolov  

Alexander Wade  
Vadim Tukh  
Anderson Wang  
Konrad Myszkowski  
Jonathan Hongsoon Kim  
Marin Ivanov  
Kristian Kostadinov  

Darryl Wu  

Allan Sadun  
Eva-Lotta Käsper  
Tom White  
Daniel Rucki  
Aaron Klein  
Max Allmendinger  
Ilya Pogodaev  
Ivan Tadeu Ferreira Antunes Filho  
Rok Kaufman  
Hong Bum Choi  
Ji Wook Kim  
Sagar Sarda  

Pedro Neves Lopes  

Erik Andersen  
Magdalena Dakeva  
Ants-Oskar Mäesalu  
Omri Faraggi  
Anna Sarukhanova  
Melanie Duncan  
Baichuan Li  
Anita Mudzhumdar  
Estere Šeinkmane  
Yash Sinha  
Amelia Shaye Lim Jin  
Edyta Gajdzik  
Mette-Triin Purde  
Erik Tamre  
Anne Ng Yin-Yi  

2013 Manchester, UK  
Alexander Wade  

Anton Sokolov  
Matyas Medek  
Gabriel Alves da Silva Diniz  
Michał Hadryś  
Iva Gumnishka  
Estere Šeinkmane  

Omri Faraggi  

Yash Sinha  
Polina Pleshak  
Kuzma Smirnov  
Martyna Siejba  
Aaron Klein  
Airika Arrik  
Boryana Hadzhiyska  
Ivan Zverev  
Huisu Yun  
Jeffrey Ling  
Yulia Markova  

Nilai Sarda  

Vesko Milev  
Marin Ivanov  
Ivan Lyutskanov  
Jacob Karlsson Lagerros  
Tom McCoy  
Martyna Judd  
Ants-Oskar Mäesalu  
Milena Velikova  
Jeong Yeon Choi  
Ekaterina Novikova  
Maciej Kucharski  
Daniel Lovsted  
Maximilian Schindler  
Jiyun Sung  
Sarah Tham  
Jan Bajer  

2014 Beijing, China  
Milo Andrea Mazurkiewicz 

Darryl Wu  
Daniel Lovsted  
Elysia Warner  
Anastasiia Dmitrieva  
Danila Shumskiy  
Dan Mirea  

Ada Melentieva  

Catherine Wu  
Chen Tianlu  
Yan Huang  
Alexander Babiak  
Zhang Ming  
Lara Jerman  
Chen Run  
Keisuke Yamada  
Stanisław Wilczyński  
Felicia Lane  
Deven Lahoti  
Xue Dailin  

Anindya Sharma  

Elena Chaparova  
Maciej Kocot  
Matyáš Medek  
Rajan Dalal  
Yoojin Jang  
Dmitrii Zelenskii  
Annika Kluge  
Jonathan Johansen  
Kevin Li  
Gleb Nikolaev  
James Bloxham  
James Abel  
Yulia Markova  
Šonita Koroļova  
Eliška Freibergerová  
Yang Heran  
Vitālijs Gusevs  
Glenn Ee Je Hong  
Simon Huang  
Maria Aristova  

2015 Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria  
James Wedgwood  

Samuel Ahmed  
James Bloxham  
Danail Penev  
Kevin Yang  
Liam McKnight  
Ada Melentyeva  

Kevin M Li  

Ying Ming Poh  
Conor Stuart-Roe  
Valentin Dimov  
Daniil Vedeneev  
Stanisław Frejlak  
Jiu Xu  
Julian Gau  
Dan Mircea Mirea  
Katarzyna Kowalska  
Ralitza Dardjonova  
Anthony Bracey  
Ivan Oleksiyuk  
Teodora-Elena Solovan  
Jan Petr  
Ruowang Zhang  
Tina Vladimirova  

Bálint Ugrin  

Nilai Sarda  
Piotr Gajdzica  
Zdravko Ivanov  
Anastasiia Alokhina  
Pim Spelier  
Naomi Solomons  
Anna Tatarenko  
Jaeyeong Yang  
Aalok Sathe  
Anthony Bruce Ma  
Diana Murzagaliyeva  
Luke Gardiner  
Nadezhda Dimitrova  
Radina Dobreva  
Emma McLean  
Irina Česnokova  
Isabelle Yen  
Matija Lovšin  
Naoki Nishiyama  
Samvida Sudheesh Venkatesh  
Timurs Davilovs  

2016 Mysore, India  
Jaeyeong Yang  

James Wedgwood  
Liam McKnight  
Max Zhang  
Jan Petr  
Katya Voloshinova  
Ivan Samodelkin  
Kristian Georgiev  
Samuel Ahmed  
Polina Nasledskova  

Margarita Misirpashayeva  

Ioana Bouroș  
Shuheng Nelson Niu  
Joonas Jürgen Kisel  
Zofia Kaczmarek  
Tina Vladimirova  
Matija Lovšin  
Luo Yiming  
Krzysztof Choszczyk  
Erik Metz  
Anna Tatarenko  
Mihail Paskov  
Julia Panchenko  
Shen-Chang Huang  
Henry Wu  
Maria Aristova  
Maciej Paliga  

Tsuyoshi Kobayashi  

Elena Shukshina  
Daniel Vedeneev  
Aalok Sathe  
Wyatt Reeves  
Wang Runze  
David Avellan-Hultman  
Bruno Ozaki  
Amanda Kann  
Agnieszka Dudek  
Emil Ingelsten  
Bai Ruiheng  
Zuzana Gruberová  
Yu Shuyue  
Claire O'Connor  
Tsvetelina Stefanova  
Theodor Cucu  
Li Huihan  
Nadezhda Dimitrova  
Mazzag Bálint  
Wojciech Piątek  
Siye Annie Zhu  
Mariia Stepaniuk  
Roman Skurikhin  
Isobel Voysey  
Yejoo Han  

2017 Dublin, Ireland  
Samuel Ahmed  

Przemysław Podleśny  
Liam McKnight  
Ruei Hung Alex Lee  
Zdravko Ivanov  
Simeon Hellsten  
Brian Xiao  
Valentin Dimov  
Elena Keskinova  
Theodor Cucu  

Andrew Tockman  

Takumi Yoshino  
Joonas Jürgen Kisel  
Jan Petr  
Harry Taylor  
Anja Zdovc  
Eliška Freibergerová  
Paweł Piekarz  
Tereza Maláčová  
Ben Morris  
Joseph Feffer  
Ziyan Heidi Lei  
Chih-Lun Julian Liu  
Assel Ismoldayeva  
Chinmaya Kausik  
Daniel Vedeneev  
Szymon Stolarczyk  
Yao Yung-Jui  

Ekaterina Voloshinova  

Emil Indzhev  
Chirag C.D.  
Iga Jaworska  
Chen Ziche  
Aleksei Starchenko  
Ana Meta Dolinar  
Siye Annie Zhu  
Emilian Toma  
Can Yeşildere  
Sonia Reilly  
Alicja Maksymiuk  
Emil Ingelsten  
Tanya Romanova  
Ștefan Răzvan Bălăucă  
Tina Vladimirova  
Matei Costin Banu  
Yuito Yoneyama  
Liu Yuyang  
Nazar Semkiv  
Aleksej Jurca  
Martin Nikolov  

2018 Prague, Czech Republic  
Przemysław Podleśny  

Liam McKnight  
Swapnil Garg  
Viktor Baltin  
Zdravko Ivanov  
Benjamin LaFond  
Diego Król  
Rujul Gandhi  
Pranav Krishna  
Alicja Maksymiuk  
Benedict Randall Shaw  
Angikar Ghosal  
Andrew Tockman  

Jakub Petr  

Chih-Chun Wang  
Tanya Romanova  
Mihir Singhal  
Yeoh Zi Song  
Simeon Hellsten  
Ugrin Bálint József  
Emil Ingelsten  
Patryk Sapała-Niedzin  
Tung-Le Pan  
Elena Keskinova  
Ethan A. Chi  
Aparna Ajit Gupte  
João Henrique Oliveira Fontes  
Russell Emerine  
You-Kuan Lin  
Illya Koval  

David Avellan-Hultman  

Vlada Petrusenko  
Tsvetelina Stefanova  
Brian Xiao  
Ken Jiang  
Ye Liu  
Edmund Lea  
Hari Raghava Prasad  
James Phillips  
Yana Shishkina  
Gustavo Palote da Silva Martins  
Ekaterina Voloshinova  
Eliška Freibergerová  
Sean White  
Vári-Kakas Andor  
Árvay-Vass Iván  
Takumi Nishino  
Angellika Vojevodina  
Arkādijs Šaldovs  
Kevin Liang  
Shinjini Ghosh  
Bianca-Mihaela Gănescu  
Pranava Dhar  
Martin Puškin  
Hansol Pi  
Georgi Yotov  
Ziche Chen  
Tiago Scholten  
Kristina Vashpanova  
Danyar Kasenov  

2019 Yongin, Republic of Korea  
Ken Jiang  

Wesley Zhang  
Takumi Yoshino  
Zdravko Ivanov  
Matey Petkov  
Haokun Wu  
Sam Corner  
Simeon Hellsten  
Benedict Randall Shaw  
Andrew Tockman  

Diego Król  

João Henrique Fontes  
Ziyan Heidi Lei  
Tianqi Jiang  
Elena Keskinova  
Jakub Petr  
Nathan Kim  
Denis Korotchenko  
Skyelar Raiti  
Russell Emerine  
Gustavo Palote  
Ishan Ganguly  
Harrison Moore  
Tsvetelina Stefanova  
Maxim Barganov  
Zi Song Yeoh  
Jeremy Zhou  
Pranav Krishna  
Jinru Bai  
Kristian Terlien  
Daniel Turaev  

Tatiana Romanova  

Kövér Blanka  
Ekaterina Kozlova  
Stanislava Khizhniakova  
Wang, Chih-Chun  
Vlada Petrusenko  
Viktor Baltin  
Matei-Costin Banu  
Ekaterina Kropanina  
Angikar Ghosal  
Aparna Ajit Gupte  
Haenaem Oh  
Hant Mikit Kolk  
Takumi Ose  
Tsubasa Takahashi  
Dana Ospanova  
Nestors Starostins  
Daria Kryvosheieva  
Marko Ivanov  
Kilian Meissner  
Blaskovics Ákos  
Rok Tadej Brunšek  
Zhe Ren Ooi  
Alex Walker  
Kristina Vashpanova  
Lanruo Xie  
Antara Raaghavi Bhattacharya  
Seonoo Kim  
Lee, Yu-Hsuan  

2021 Ventspils, Latvia  
Roman Shabanov  

Daria Kryvosheieva  
Jonathan Huang  
Ritam Nag  
Hibiki Sugawara  
Jan Tryka  
Takamichi Hoshii  
Chun-Chi Lin  
Antara Raaghavi Bhattacharya  
Xie Lingrui  
Mihai-Alexandru Bratu  
Elvira Ageeva  

Aleksandra Limonova  

Tam Lok Hang  
Alexander Dimitrov  
Bartosz Chomiński  
Aleksandra Naydenova  
Ip Tsz Oi  
Leonid Zaitsev  
Toh Jing En Daniel  
Grigorii Solnyshkin  
Artem Borisov  
Nigel Yong  
Dylan Lim Chun Kiat  
Samantha Kao  
Ema Grofová  
Miklós Gyetvai  
Zijing Wei  
Olga Zinovyeva  
Rio Ogawa  
Walt Kraeger  

Lili Probojcsevity  

Shao-Chi Ou  
Deyana Shevchenko  
Kunaal Chandrashekar  
Olivia Tennisberg  
Jeremy Zhou  
Vedant Singh  
Miłosz Muszyński  
Riley Kong  
Ng Truman Toby  
Vasilena Lazarova  
Matic Petek  
Mihaela Koleva  
Ilya Tarasov  
Ivaylo Dimitrov  
Nicoleta Dobrică  
Toby Collins  
Kyuhan Kyung  
Yi-Ning Chang  
Louis Cho  
Jonathan Song  
Bianca-Maria Crișan  
Shashwat Mundra  
Zekai Wu  
Vishruth Ram Konakanchi  
Daina Myer Neithardt  
Kent Do  
Oscar Despard  
Nestors Starostins  
Noah Gorrell  
Yen-Hsi Huang  
Darya Peressypkina  
Yage Grace Xin  

2022 Castletown, Isle of Man  
Artem Borisov

Jun Hyeong Yook  
Alison Craig-Greene  
Luke Robitaille  
Aleksandar Dimitrov  
Konstantin Georgiev  
Mihai-Alexandru Bratu  
Takamichi Hoshii  
Seiko Ishii  

Tam Lok Hang  

Kunaal Chandrashekar  
Vlad-Ștefan Oros  
Riley Kong  
William Thomson  
Rishab Parthasarathy  
Benjamin McAvoy-Bickford  
Wojciech Szot  
Gergana Petrova  
Daria Kryvosheieva  
Bartłomiej Rozenberg  
Long Yo Lee  
George Zhou  
Yi Ning Chang  
Yelyzaveta Sherepenko  
Merlin Fischer  
Fernando César Gonçalves Filho  
Toby Collins  
Siddhant Attavar  
Artem Boyko
Matouš Šafránek  
Stratos Voudouris  
Lorenss Martinsons  

Anita Dalma Páhán  

Hyunsoo Park  
Henry Wong Tok Shing  
Olivia Tennisberg  
Viktoriia Zubkova
Aida Davletova  
Ikoma Kudo  
Réka Wagener  
Egyházi Hanna  
Benjamin Móricz  
Teodor Malchev  
Vita Korošin  
Tanupat Trakulthongchai  
Max Naigeborin  
Elvira Ageeva
Aleksandra Naydenova  
Katja Andolšek  
Aidan Wang  
Nestors Starostins  
Jan Karpiński  
Nicoleta Dobrică  
Darya Peressypkina  
Kevin Yan  
Inka Pekkola  
Junhyuk Kwon  
Rok Tadej Brunšek  
Józef Szymański  

2023 Bansko, Bulgaria  
Tam Lok Hang  

Ryusei Omiya  
Wonhyun Soh  
Vlad-Ștefan Oros  
Daria Kryvosheieva  
William Keith Thomson  
Artem Boyko
Kunaal Chandrashekar  
Konstantin Georgiev  
Leonardo Torres  
Leonardo Paillo  
Eleonora Stepanova

Elena Păvăloaia  

Panawat Tiacharoen  
Mihai-Alexandru Bratu  
Viktoriia Zubkova
Jordan Chi  
Samantha Kao  
Zhang Yixuan  
He Jianxing  
Rei Kano  
Wong Tok Shing Henry  
Wojciech Szot  
Daniel Titmas  
Alison Craig-Greene  
Matei Chirila  
Nestors Starostins  
Sukrith Velmineti  
Teodor Malchev  
Deeraj Pothapragada  
Eric Wu  
Bartłomiej Rozenberg  
Gyuhwa Lee  
Faraz Ahmed Siddiqui  
Benjamin Móricz  
Rami Hennawi  

Eleanor Borrel  

Chung Chi-En  
Teresa Lage  
Arul Kolla  
Jonasz Kościkiewicz  
Zori Schmidt  
Merlin Jonathan Fischer  
Everton Albuquerque De Oliveira  
Alexander Shlykov
Jiang Yiling  
Perry Dai  
Benjamin Yang  
Luiz Satoshi Yunomae Oikawa  
Darren Su  
Chen Nuo  
Brest Lenarčič  
Mihaela Anghel  
Hiroto Yasui  
Gangrae Kim  
Li Jiying  
Wang Po-Hsiang  
Valeriia Pischchymukha  
Rando Lukk  
João Pedro Alves Ferreira  
Mikhail Iomdin  
Nikolay Georgiev  
Carl Fredrik Constantin Lidberg Dimos  
Satoshi Tsukada  
Hwang Yen-Hsi  
Matěj Čapka  
Manoela Ferraz  
Bognár András Károly  

Team medals edit

Nbr Year Location Team Gold Team Silver Team Bronze Winning team in individual competition
1 2003 Borovets, Bulgaria Netherlands   Russia-StPetersburg   Russia-Moscow   Netherlands  
2 2004 Moskva, Russia Russia-StPetersburg   Latvia   Bulgaria-1   Bulgaria-1  
3 2005 Leiden, The Netherlands Netherlands   Russia-Moscow   Russia-StPetersburg   Bulgaria-1  
4 2006 Tartu, Estonia Bulgaria-2   Netherlands   Poland-1   Bulgaria-1  
5 2007 Sankt-Peterburg, Russia USA-2  
Moscow  
Bulgaria-1  
Bulgaria-2  
None awarded Estonia  
6 2008 Slantchev Bryag, Bulgaria USA-2  
Bulgaria-East  
Netherlands  
USA-1  
None awarded USA  
7 2009 Wrocław, Poland USA-Red   Korea-1   Russia-Moscow   Russia-Moscow  
8 2010 Stockholm, Sweden Latvia   Russia-Moscow   Poland-2   USA-Blue  
9 2011 Pittsburgh, USA USA-Red   Russia-StPetersburg   Russia-Moscow   USA-Red  
10 2012 Ljubljana, Slovenia USA-Blue   Netherlands   Poland-2   Russia-StPetersburg  
11 2013 Manchester, UK USA-Red   Russia-StPetersburg   Bulgaria-1  
Romania  
USA-Red  
12 2014 Beijing, China USA-Red   Russia-StPetersburg   Russia-Moscow   USA-Red  
13 2015 Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria UK-West   USA-Red   Poland-White  
Netherlands  
USA-Red  
14 2016 Mysore, India Sweden   Australia-1   UK   USA-Red  
15 2017 Dublin, Ireland Taiwan-TaiTWO   Poland-Ą   Slovenia   UK-K  
16 2018 Prague, Czech Republic USA-Blue   USA-Red  
Bulgaria 1  
Brazil Pões  
UK-U  
Czechia Tým křivopřísežníků  
USA-Blue  
17 2019 Yongin, Republic of Korea Slovenia   China KUN  
Russia Strelka  
Poland Bóbr  
Russia Belka  
Malaysia A 
USA Red  
18 2021 Ventspils, Latvia Ukraine і   USA Red   India Saffron  
Canada Moose  
Hong Kong EAT  
19 2022 Castletown, Isle of Man Korea Mal   Taiwan Blue Magpie  
Japan Samurai  
Japan Ninja  
USA Red  
UK K  
USA Red  
20 2023 Bansko, Bulgaria United Kingdom   USA Red  
Canada Anglophone  
Finland  
Hungary Uborka  
Poland Ę  
Not awarded

All-time medal table edit

Only countries with at least 1 gold medal are listed. The list is accurate up to 2023.[36]

Rank Country Appearances Participants Gold Silver Bronze Total Honorable Mentions
1   Bulgaria 20 162 22 25 36 83 29
2   United States 16 132 21 37 28 86 24
3   Russia 18 156 17 30 39 86 24
4   United Kingdom 14 88 15 14 15 44 14
5   Poland 19 145 8 22 18 48 34
6   Japan 11 76 6 4 9 19 15
7   Republic of Korea 14 120 5 6 17 28 24
8   Romania 12 51 5 6 10 21 4
9   India 14 84 4 8 17 29 13
10   Ukraine 9 48 4 4 7 15 17
11   Brazil 10 59 3 6 10 19 11
12   Netherlands 20 87 3 3 3 9 19
13 no country 2 8 3 2 3 8 0
14   Taiwan 10 59 2 11 9 22 14
15   Estonia 20 91 2 7 20 29 19
16   Czechia 12 53 2 7 5 14 11
17   Hong Kong 4 20 2 5 2 9 0
18   Canada (Anglophone) 6 24 2 4 6 12 3
19   China 10 76 1 9 15 25 18
20   Latvia 20 88 1 4 13 18 13
21   Australia 14 85 1 4 5 10 10
22   Canada 6 24 1 1 4 6 10

Media coverage edit

  • Newspaper article in The Age "It may be semantics, but linguistics can be a team event". July 27, 2012.[37]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "International Linguistics Olympiad FAQ". www.ioling.org. Retrieved November 10, 2019.
  2. ^ "Из истории кафедры и отделения структурной/теоретической и прикладной лингвистики (ОСиПЛ/ОТиПЛ): 1960-2000". Retrieved March 29, 2024.
  3. ^ Martins, Eduardo C. (June 22, 2022). Olimpíadas de linguística: mosaico de uma prática social baseada em problemas (PhD Thesis thesis) (in Portuguese). Universidade de Brasília.
  4. ^ Original quote: Важным средством обучения основным положениям и методам языкознания могут служить специально составленные задачи. В существующих сборниках в качестве материала для задач в большинстве случаев используются факты родного языка учащихся или наиболее известных европейских языков. Такие задачи, безусловно, полезны, но, к сожалению, они часто страдают тем недостатком, что в них трудно отделить собственно лингвистическое задание (не требующее ничего, кроме понимания основных лингвистических положений) от проверки знания конкретных фактов рассматриваемого языка. Наилучший (хотя отнюдь не единственный) способ избавиться от этого второго элемента задания, не имеющего прямого отношения к общему языкознанию, состоит в том, чтобы составлять задачи на материале языков, незнакомых учащемуся. Разумеется, составлять такие задачи труднее, поскольку все существенные для решения конкретные факты должны быть так или иначе представлены в исходных данных задачи, зато от учащегося в этом случае требуется только представление о свойствах языка вообще. (p. 8) Зализняк, Андрей Анатольевич (2013) [1963]. Лингвистические задачи. Москва: МЦНМО. p. 40. ISBN 978-5-4439-0094-0.
  5. ^ "Милославский, Игорь Григорьевич". Летопись Московского университета.
  6. ^ "Памяти Б.Ю Городецкого". Филологический факультет, МГУ имени М. В. Ломоносова. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  7. ^ "Александра Раскина". Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d Martins, Eduardo C. (June 29, 2022). Olimpíadas de Linguística: mosaico de uma prática social baseada em problemas (PhD). Universidade de Brasília. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  9. ^ "International history". United Kingdom Linguistics Olympiad. June 3, 2011. Archived from the original on January 2, 2014. Retrieved August 9, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c d "First International Olympiad in Linguistics (2003)". Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, Moscow State University. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  11. ^ "History of Linguistic Challenges". NACLO. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  12. ^ "IOL 2003". International Linguistics Olympiad official website. Archived from the original on June 30, 2013. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  13. ^ "Second International Linguistic Olympiad (2004)". Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, Moscow State University. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  14. ^ "Second International Linguistic Olympiad (2004)". Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, Moscow State University. Archived from the original on October 16, 2005. Retrieved August 14, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ "Internet Archive: Third International Linguistics Olympiad". Archived from the original on February 8, 2006. Retrieved August 14, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ "Fourth International Linguistics Olympiad for Secondary School Students". Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  17. ^ a b "The Fifth International Linguistics Olympiad". Archived from the original on October 5, 2011. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  18. ^ "6th International Linguistics Olympiad". Archived from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  19. ^ "7th International Olympiad in Linguistics". Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  20. ^ "IOL10". Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  21. ^ "IOL 2011: Venue". Archived from the original on August 25, 2018. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  22. ^ "The 10th International Linguistics Olympiad". Archived from the original on June 30, 2013. Retrieved August 7, 2013.
  23. ^ "The International Linguistics Olympiad 2013". July 29, 2012. Archived from the original on August 29, 2017. Retrieved August 7, 2013.
  24. ^ "The International Linguistics Olympiad 2014". Archived from the original on July 31, 2014. Retrieved July 27, 2014.
  25. ^ "The International Linguistics Olympiad 2015". Retrieved August 17, 2015.
  26. ^ "International Olympiad for Linguists 2016". iol14.plo-in.org. Archived from the original on January 12, 2016. Retrieved January 6, 2016.
  27. ^ "International Linguistics Olympiad 2018". iol.ff.cuni.cz. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
  28. ^ "IOL 2018 Participants". IOL. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  29. ^ "IOL Yongin 2019". IOL 2019. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  30. ^ "IOL 2019 Participants". IOL. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  31. ^ "The Asia Pacific Linguistics Olympiad". Retrieved August 14, 2023.
  32. ^ a b "Ventspils 2021". Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  33. ^ "IOL Castletown 2022". IOL 2022. Archived from the original on October 6, 2022. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
  34. ^ "IOL Bansko 2023". IOL 2023. Retrieved August 3, 2023.
  35. ^ "Participants". IOL 2016. Archived from the original on July 9, 2016. Retrieved July 9, 2016.
  36. ^ "Results". International Linguistics Olympiad. Retrieved July 30, 2021.
  37. ^ "It may be semantics, but linguistics can be a team event". The Age. Australia. July 26, 2012. Retrieved August 7, 2012.

External links edit