This new addition to the series on the phonology of the world's languages edited
by Jacques Durand is the most comprehensive study of the synchronic
phonology of Standard Chinese (or Standard Mandarin) since the publication
of Cheng's (1973) monograph. Duanmu provides a detailed description of the
phonological facts in Standard Chinese (henceforth SC), some of which are new
or little studied before, offers new perspectives on old problems and proposes
a theoretical analysis of these facts in current frameworks such as feature
geometry, metrical phonology and Optimality Theory. The main innovation
and, in my opinion, the most significant contribution of this book is the
extensive coverage of stress (or metrical structure) and its influence on the order
and length of compound words. The role of metrical structure is also extended
to the analysis of some long-standing problems of the well-known tone 3 sandhi
process. Claiming the existence of stress and its importance to understanding
the interaction of phonology and morphosyntax in SC may come as a surprise
to some readers since SC is not a stress language and its phonetic stress is
notoriously difficult to detect. The proposed metrical analysis, nonetheless, is
innovative and convincingly argued, and has clearly established the phonological
relevance of metrical structure for SC.