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The Handbook of Phonological Theory

by John A. Goldsmith (Editor)

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The Handbook of Phonological Theory, Second Edition, is an innovative and detailed examination of recent developments in phonology. Revised from the ground up, the book is comprised almost entirely of newly-written and previously unpublished chapters. Offers new and unique contributions reflecting the advances in phonological theory since publication of the first edition in 1995 Addresses the important questions in the field including learnability, phonological interfaces, tone, and variation, and assesses the findings and accomplishments in these domains Features contributions by an international team of leading phonologists Along with the first edition, currently available in paperback, forms the most complete and current look at the subject in print… (more)
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The Handbook of Phonological Theory, Second Edition, is an innovative and detailed examination of recent developments in phonology. Revised from the ground up, the book is comprised almost entirely of newly-written and previously unpublished chapters. Offers new and unique contributions reflecting the advances in phonological theory since publication of the first edition in 1995 Addresses the important questions in the field including learnability, phonological interfaces, tone, and variation, and assesses the findings and accomplishments in these domains Features contributions by an international team of leading phonologists Along with the first edition, currently available in paperback, forms the most complete and current look at the subject in print

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Book description
• John Goldsmith, Phonological theory, 1-23
• K.P. Mohanan, The organization of the grammar, 24-69
• Jennifer Cole, The cycle in phonology, 70-113
• Donca Steriade, Underspecification and markedness, 114-174
• Ellen Broselow, Skeletal positions and moras, 175-205
• Juliette Blevins, The syllable in phonological theory, 206-244
• G.N. Clements & Elizabeth V. Hume, The internal organization of speech sounds, 245-306
• David Perlmutter, Phonological quantity and multiple association, 307-317
• John J. McCarthy & Alan S. Prince, Prosodic morphology, 318-366
• René Kager, The metrical theory of word stress, 367-402
• Morris Halle & William Idsardi, General properties of stress and metrical structure, 403-443
• David Odden, Tone: African languages, 444-475
• Moira Yip, Tone in East Asian languages, 476-494
• Harry van der Hulst & Jeroen van de Weijer, Vowel harmony, 495-534
• Sharon Inkelas & Draga Zec, Syntax-phonology interface, 535-549
• Elisabeth Selkirk, Sentence prosody: intonation, stress, and phrasing, 550-569
• Colin J. Ewen, Dependency relations in phonology, 570-585
• Sanford A. Schane, Diphthongization in particle phonology, 586-608
• Gregory K. Iverson, Rule ordering, 609-614
• Diane Brentari, Sign language phonology: ASL, 615-639
• Paul Kiparsky, The phonological basis of sound change, 640-670
• Marlys A. Macken, Phonological acquisition, 671-696
• Bruce Bagemihl, Language games and related areas, 697-712
• John J. Ohala, Experimental phonology, 713-722
• Nick Evans, Current issues in the phonology of Australian languages, 723-761
• Paul Newman, Hausa tonology: complexities in an “easy” tone language, 762-781
• Grover Hudson, Phonology of Ethiopian languages, 782-791
• Bernard Tranel, Current issues in French phonology: liaison and position theory, 798-816
• Junko Itô & R. Armin Mester, Japanese phonology, 817-838
• Robert D. Hoberman, Current issues in Semitic phonology, 839-847
• Jerzy Rubach, Representations and the organization of rules in Slavic phonology, 848-866
• James W. Harris, Projection and edge marking in the computation of stress in Spanish, 867-887
• Bibliography, 888-963
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