1: Introduction2: Morphologically conditioned phonology3: Process morphology4: Prosodic templates5: Reduplication6: Infixation7: Interleaving: The phonological interpretation of morphologically complex words8: Morphologically derived environment effects9: Phonology interferes with morphology10: Nonparallelism between phonological and morphological structure11: Paradigmatic effects12: Conclusion
Sharon Inkelas received her PhD in Linguistics from Stanford University in 1989; her dissertation was directed by Paul Kiparsky. After teaching at UCLA and the University of Maryland, Inkelas came to Berkeley in 1990 and assumed her present faculty position in 1992. She has taught courses in phonology, morphology, and the phonology-morphology interface at five Linguistic Society of America Summer Institutes. In 2005 she published Reduplication: Doubling in Morphology (CUP) with Cheryl Zoll.
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