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The papers collected in this volume examine selected aspects of the interaction of phonology with phonetics, morphosyntax and the lexicon in a variety of languages including Korean, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, British English, Polish, Russian, Ukrainian, Dutch and Hawaiian. In order to approach the role and ways of expressing extraphonological information in phonology, the international contributors adopt different methods of analysis (data gathering, experiments, theoretical discussions), couched in various theoretical frameworks (such as Optimality Theory and Government Phonology), which…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The papers collected in this volume examine selected aspects of the interaction of phonology with phonetics, morphosyntax and the lexicon in a variety of languages including Korean, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, British English, Polish, Russian, Ukrainian, Dutch and Hawaiian. In order to approach the role and ways of expressing extraphonological information in phonology, the international contributors adopt different methods of analysis (data gathering, experiments, theoretical discussions), couched in various theoretical frameworks (such as Optimality Theory and Government Phonology), which reveal both the multifarious faces and interfaces of modern phonological research.
Autorenporträt
Jolanta Szpyra-Koz¿owska is Professor of English Linguistics and Chair of Phonetics and Phonology in the Department of English at Maria Curie-Sk¿odowska University, Lublin, Poland. She has published extensively on English and Polish phonology, the phonology-morphology interaction, and pronunciation pedagogy and gender linguistics. Eugeniusz Cyran is Professor of Linguistics and Chair of the Department of Phonology and Phonetics in the Institute of English Studies at John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Poland. He has published on Polish and Irish phonology and the phonology-phonetics interface. His interests include syllabic organization, sub-segmental representation and the relationship between phonology and phonetics.