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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

plural
suffix
that
can
surface
as
[s],
[z],
or
[ɪz]
depending
on
the
preceding
sound.
Morphophonemic
analysis
uses
rules,
constraints,
or
other
mechanisms
to
map
underlying
representations
onto
surface
forms
and
to
account
for
alternations
caused
by
affixation,
stem
changes,
or
phonological
processes
like
vowel
harmony
or
assimilation.
[d],
or
[ɪd],
and
stem-internal
vowel
changes
such
as
go/went
or
sing/sang/sung.
Turkish
shows
morphophonological
effects
through
vowel
harmony
in
suffix
vowels
that
reflect
root
vowel
characteristics,
illustrating
how
morphology
can
condition
phonology
across
word
forms.
as
optimality
theory
and
autosegmental
frameworks.
Morphophonology
provides
tools
for
explaining
irregular
inflection,
predicting
phonological
patterns
in
various
languages,
and
modeling
diachronic
sound
changes,
making
it
essential
in
descriptive
linguistics,
language
documentation,
and
computational
linguistics.