The Phonology and Morphology of Australian Languages
Australian languages form a large genetic group with many interesting and distinctive phonological and morphological properties. Written by two experts in the field, this is the first book-length treatment of this topic, providing an in-depth discussion of a wealth of little-known data on the sound systems and word structures of Australian Indigenous languages. It includes a critical evaluation of theoretical approaches from the 1950s up to the current day, including recent experimental, psycholinguistic and processing-based research. Each chapter addresses a major aspect of phonology, including the segmental inventories, complex phonotactic systems, alternations, prosodic phonology and morphology, the behaviour of phonological domains, and the unusual nature of sound change in Australia. The authors also add to this their own groundbreaking findings, and frame each chapter to inform future phonological research and theory. It is essential reading for scholars and students in phonology, phonetics, speech science, morphology, and language typology.
- Summarises the features of Australian languages to bring both experts and non-experts up to date with the essential characteristics of the phonologies of Australian languages
- Systematically and critically discusses the importance of Australian languages for theories of phonology and morphology
- Includes around 50 – 100 examples per chapter from Australian language grammars, from both well-known and hard-to-access materials on the phonology of Australian languages
Product details
September 2025Hardback
9781107126985
400 pages
229 × 152 mm
0kg
Not yet published - available from September 2025
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction to the languages of Australia
- 2. Segments
- 3. Phonotactics and the syllable
- 4. Metrical structure
- 5. Prosodic morphology and long-distance alternations
- 6. Phonological domains
- 7. Sound change and the lexicon
- 8. Looking back, and looking forward.