The Handbook of Phonological Theory, second edition
offers an innovative and detailed examination of recent
developments in phonology, and the implications of these within
linguistic theory and related disciplines.
* Revised from the ground-up for the second edition, the book is
comprised almost entirely of newly-written and previously
unpublished chapters
* Addresses the important questions in the field including
learnability, phonological interfaces, tone, and variation, and
assesses the findings and accomplishments in these domains
* Brings together a renowned and international contributor
team
* Offers new and unique reflections on the advances in
phonological theory since publication of the first edition in
1995
* Along with the first edition, still in publication,
it forms the most complete and current overview of the subject
in print
Spis treści
List of Contributors vii
Preface ix
1 Rules v. Constraints 1
David Odden
2 Opacity and Ordering 40
Eric Bakovic´
3 The Interaction Between Morphology and Phonology 68
Sharon Inkelas
4 Quantity 103
Stuart Davis
5 Stress Systems 141
Matthew Gordon
6 The Syllable 164
John A. Goldsmith
7 Tone: Is it Different? 197
Larry M. Hyman
8 Harmony Systems 240
Sharon Rose and Rachel Walker
9 Contrast Reduction 291
Alan C. L. Yu
10 Diachronic Explanations of Sound Patterns 319
Gunnar Ólafur Hansson
11 Phonetics in Phonology 348
D. R. Ladd
12 Corpora and Exemplars in Phonology 374
Mirjam Ernestus and R. Harald Baayen
13 The Place of Variation in Phonological Theory 401
Andries W. Coetzee and Joe Pater
14 The Syntax-Phonology Interface 435
Elisabeth Selkirk
15 Intonation 485
Mary E. Beckman and Jennifer J. Venditti
16 Dependency-based Phonologies 533
Harry van der Hulst
17 The Acquisition of Phonology 571
Katherine Demuth
18 Phonology as Computation 596
John Coleman
19 Using Psychological Realism to Advance Phonological Theory
631
Matthew Goldrick
20 Learning and Learnability in Phonology 661
Adam Albright and Bruce Hayes
21 Sign Language Phonology 691
Diane Brentari
22 Language Games 722
Bert Vaux
23 Loanword Adaptation: From Lessons Learned to Findings
751
Carole Paradis and Darlene La Charité
References 779
Index 914
O autorze
John A. Goldsmith is Edward Carson Waller Distinguished Service Professor of Linguistics and Computer Science at the University of Chicago. He is author of Autosegmental and Metrical Phonology (Basil Blackwell, 1990).
Jason Riggle is Assistant Professor of Linguistics and Director of the Chicago Language Modeling Lab at the University of Chicago. He has published in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, Research on Language and Computation, Linguistic Inquiry and Computational Linguistics.
Alan C. L. Yu is Associate Professor of Linguistics and Director of the Phonology Laboratory at the University of Chicago. He is the author of A Natural History of Infixation (2007) and has published in Language, Phonology, and the Journal of Phonetics.