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The Handbook of Phonological Theory
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Table of Contents

List of Contributors. Preface. List of Abbreviations. 1. Phonological Theory: John Goldsmith (University of Chicago). 2. The Organization of the Grammar: K P. Mohanan (National University of Singapore). 3. The Cycle in Phonology: Jennifer Cole (University of Illinois, Champaign--Urbana). 4. Underspecification and Markedness: Donca Steriade (University of California, Los Angeles). 5. Skeletal Positions and Moras: Ellen Broselow (State University of New York, Stony Brook). 6. The Syllable in Phonological Theory: Juliette Blevins (University of Western Australia, Nedlands). 7. The Internal Organization of Speech Sounds: G. N. Clements (Institute of Phonetics, Paris) and Elizabeth V. Hume (Ohio State University, Columbus). 8. Phonological Quantity and Multiple Association: David Perlmutter (University of Rochester, NY). 9. Prosodic Morphology: John J. McCarthy (University of Massachusetts, Amherst) and Alan S. Prince (Rutgers University, New Brunswick). 10. The Metrical Theory of Word Stress: Rene Kager (Onderzoeksinstituut voor Taal en Spraak, Utrecht.). 11. General Properties of Stress and Metrical Structure: Moris Halle (MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts) and William Idsardi (University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware). 12. Tone: African Languages: David Odden (Ohio State University, Columbus). 13. Tone in East Asian Languages: Moira Yip (University of California, Irvine). 14. Vowel Harmony: Harry van der Hulst (Holland Institute of Generative Linguistics, University of Leiden) and Jeroen van de Weijer (Holland Institute of Generative Linguistics, University of Leiden). 15. Syntax--phonology Interface: Sharon Inkelas (University of California, Berkeley) and Draga Zec (Cornell University, Ithaca). 16. Sentence Prosody: Intonation, Stress, and Phrasing: Elisabeth Selkirk (University of Massachusetts, Amherst). 17. Dependency Relations in Phonology: Colin J. Ewen (Rijksuniversiteit, Leiden). 18. Diphthongization in Particle Phonology: Sanford A. Schane (University of California, Santa Cruz). 19. Rule Ordering: Gregory K. Iverson (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee). 20. Sign Language Phonology: ASL: Diane Brentari (University of California, Davis). 21. The Phonological Basis of Sound Charge: Paul Kiparsky (University of Massachusetts, Amherst). 22. Phonological Acquisition: Marlys A. Macken (University of Wisconsin, Madison). 23. Language Games and Related Areas: Bruce Bagemihl (University of British Columbia, Vancouver). 24. Experimental Phonology: John J. Ohala (University of California, Berkeley). 25. Current Issues in the Phonology of Australian Languages: Nick Evans (University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria). 26. Hausa Tonology: complexities in an "Easy" Tone Language: Paul Newman (Indiana University, Bloomington). 27. Phonology of Ethiopian Languages: Grover Hudson (Michigan State University, East Lansing). 28. Current Issues in French Phonology: Liaison and Position Theories: Bernard Tranel (University of California, Irvine). 29. Japanese Phonology: Junko Ito (University of California, Santa Cruz) and R. Armin Mester (University of California, Santa Cruz). 30. Current Issues in Semitic Phonology: Robert D. Hoberman (State University of New York, Stony Brook). 31. Representations and the Organization of Rules in Slavic Phonology: Jerzy Rubach (University of Iowa and Institute of English Studies, University of Warsaw). 32. Projection and Edge Marking in the Computation of Stress in Spanish: James W. Harris (MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts). Bibliography. Indexes.

About the Author

John A. Goldsmith is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Chicago. He is author of Autosegmental and Metrical Phonology, also published by Blackwell.

Reviews

"The Handbook is an especially valuable book, and one that will be used by phonologists for some years to come." Karen Rice, University of Toronto "The desideratum of the year for linguists specializing in the arcane game of phonology. The contributors, Paul Kiparsky, John Ohala, Donca Steriada and many more, represent the foremost names in the field." Times Literary Supplement

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