Undoubtedly the most important contribution to the study of the syllabic phonology of Spanish produced in the last two decades. Written within the framework of optimality theory, Colina addresses in a clear and insightful way a wide range of issues related to syllabic constituency and its interaction with other domains of Spanish phonology and morphology. The volume will be an invaluable asset and an indispensable resource for graduate Spanish phonology courses and for future research on Spanish syllable structure. -- Fernando Martinez-Gil, associate professor of Hispanic linguistics, The Ohio State University In this groundbreaking book, Sonia Colina offers a clear and comprehensive analysis of syllable-related phonology in Spanish from the perspective of optimality theory. Spanish Phonology should be required reading for all students and scholars of Spanish linguistics. -- Jose Ignacio Hualde, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign An excellent, pedagogically-sound introduction to Spanish phonology from an optimality-theoretic perspective. The focus of the book is on phonological analysis of syllable structure and syllable-related phenomena in Spanish phonology. Each chapter builds on the preceding one in a logical progression. A particular strength of the book is that as issues are discussed, dialectal data showing variation is presented and analyzed. This book is not only for the student of Spanish phonology, but for anyone interested in phonology more generally. -- Stuart Davis, professor and chair, Department of Linguistics, Indiana University This is an excellent book ... [It] will be invaluable to students, scholars, and anyone seeking to understand the Spanish sound system from a state-of-the-art theoretical perspective. -- Travis G. Bradley, University of California, Davis Offers an outstanding comprehensive monographic treatment of Spanish phonology from within current linguistic theory, the first in decades. It will be of great value to students, instructors, and researchers alike whose interests lie in Spanish, romance and general linguistics, as well as in optimality theory and variation and dialect studies. -- D. Eric Holt, University of South Carolina A valiant, successful attempt to bring together into a cohesive account a number of syllable-driven phonological and morphophonological phenomena. The data are drawn from a range of diatopic variants, and the OT formalisation is usefully pitted against previous rule-and-derivation analyses. -- Iggy Roca, University of Essex
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