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Bryan A. Garner : ウィキペディア英語版
Bryan A. Garner
Bryan A. Garner (born November 17, 1958, in Lubbock, Texas) is an American lawyer, lexicographer, and teacher who has written several books about English usage and style, including ''Garner's Modern American Usage'' and ''Elements of Legal Style''. He is the editor-in-chief of all current editions of ''Black's Law Dictionary''. He has coauthored two books with Justice Antonin Scalia: ''Making Your Case: The Art of Persuading Judges'' (2008) and ''Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts'' (2012).
Founder and president of LawProse, Inc., he serves as Distinguished Research Professor of Law at Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law.〔(SMU Faculty )〕
==Biography==
Garner was born in Lubbock, Texas〔(【引用サイトリンク】title= Lubbock, Texas )〕 and raised in San Marino, California, and Canyon, Texas. He attended Canyon High School and then the University of Texas at Austin, where he was enrolled in a liberal arts honors program called Plan II. Garner published excerpts from his senior thesis, notably "Shakespeare's Latinate Neologisms" and "Latin-Saxon Hybrids in Shakespeare and the Bible."〔John W. Velz, ''Looking Back at Some Turns in the Road'', in Burnt Orange Britannia (Wm. Roger Louis ed., 2005), at 390, 400.〕〔Carlton Stowers, ''Courtly Language'', Dallas Observer, 19–25 July 2001, pp. 20–21.〕〔Nancy Kruh, "Bryan Garner: The Lawyer and Lexicographer Is a Man of His Words", ''Dallas Morning News'', 9 May 1999, High Profile §, pp. E1, 4–5.〕〔Paul Kix, "The English Teacher", ''D Magazine'', Nov. 2007, at 41–44.〕〔Dave Moore, "On a Language Quest", ''Dallas Business Journal'', Oct. 5–11, 2007, at 37, 42–43.〕
Garner attended the University of Texas at Austin (1977–1981) and, upon receiving his B.A. degree, entered the University of Texas School of Law, where he served as associate editor of the ''Texas Law Review''. After receiving his J.D. degree in 1984, he clerked for Judge Thomas M. Reavley of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit before joining the Dallas firm of Carrington, Coleman, Sloman & Blumenthal, where he worked as a litigation associate from 1985 to 1988. He then returned to the University of Texas School of Law as a visiting associate professor and was named director of the short-lived Texas/Oxford Center for Legal Lexicography, while teaching writing and editing seminars at the law school. In 1990, he left the University to found LawProse, Inc., a Dallas company that provides seminars on clear writing for lawyers and judges.〔(Legal Lexicographer )〕

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