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Zusammenfassung Phonological Structure and Phonetic Form brings together work from phonology! phonetics! speech science! electrical engineering! psycholinguistics and sociolinguistics. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Introduction Patricia Keating; Part I. Intonation: 2. Articulatory evidence for differentiating stress categories Mary E. Beckman and Jan Edwards; 3. 'Stress shift' as early placement of pitch accents Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel; 4. Constraints on the gradient variability of pitch range, or, pitch level 4 lives! D. Robert Ladd; 5. 'Gesture' in prosody Bruce Hayes; 6. What is the smallest prosodic domain? Vincent J. van Heuven; 7. The segment as smallest prosodic element: a curious hypothesis Allard Jongman; Part II. Syllables: 8. Articulatory phonetic clues to syllable affiliation Alice Turk; 9. The phonology and phonetics of extrasyllabicity in French Annie Rialland; 10. Phonetic correlates of syllable affiliation Francis Nolan; 11. Syllable structure and word structure Janet Pierrehumbert; Part III. Feature Theory: 12. The phonetics and phonology of Semitic pharyngeals John J. McCarthy; 13. Possible articulatory bases for the class of guttural consonants Louis Goldstein; 14. Phonetic evidence for hierarchies of futures Kenneth N. Stevens; 15. Do acoustic landmarks constrain the coordination of articulatory events? Louis Goldstein; Part IV. Phonetic Output: 16. Phonetic evidence for sound change in Quebec French Malcah Yaeger-Dror; 17. Polysyllabic words in the York Talk synthesis system John Coleman; 18. Phonetic arbitrariness and the input problem Keith Johnson; 19. Lip aperture and consonant releases Catherine P. Browman; 20. Change and stability in the contrasts conveyed by consonant releases John Kingston; Indexes.