This textbook introduces the reader to the field of phonology, from
allophones to faithfulness and exemplars. It assumes no prior knowledge
of the field, and includes a brief review chapter on phonetics. It is
written within the framework of Cognitive Linguistics, but covers a wide
range of historical and contemporary theories, from the Prague School to
Optimality Theory. While many examples are based on American and British
English, there are also discussions of some aspects of French and German
colloquial speech and phonological analysis problems from many other
languages around the world. In addition to the basics of phoneme theory,
features, and morphophonemics there are chapters on casual speech, first
and second language acquisition and historical change. A final chapter
covers a number of issues in contemporary phonological theory, including
some of the classic debates in Generative Phonology (rule ordering,
abstractness, 'derivationalism') and proposals for usage-based
phonologies.