Morphophonological
Morphophonology, also called morphophonemics, is the study of how morphological structure and phonological form interact to shape the sound patterns of words. It sits at the interface of morphology, which concerns word formation and inflection, and phonology, which describes sound systems. Morphophonology investigates how morphemes—roots and affixes—are realized differently across phonological environments and how phonological processes can be conditioned by morphological context.
A central concept is allomorphy, where a single morpheme has several phonetic realizations, as in the English
Examples include English plural -s with its three allomorphs, the English past tense -ed pronounced as [t],
The field encompasses historical and theoretical dimensions, ranging from explicit rule-based accounts to modern approaches such