| Acknowledgements | p. ix |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| The evolution of stressed vowels | p. 5 |
| Syllables and word stress in Latin | p. 5 |
| Stressed vowels: the (almost) pan-Romance seven-vowel system | p. 8 |
| Special developments in stressed vowels | p. 19 |
| The three Latin diphthongs | p. 23 |
| Exercises | p. 24 |
| Early changes in syllable structure and consonants | p. 26 |
| Prosthetic vowels | p. 26 |
| Syncope and new consonant clusters | p. 28 |
| Merger of /b/ and /w/ | p. 31 |
| Early consonant losses | p. 33 |
| In search of Popular Latin speech | p. 36 |
| Exercises | p. 40 |
| Consonant weakening and strengthening | p. 44 |
| Degemination | p. 44 |
| Lenition | p. 45 |
| Other consonant weakenings | p. 48 |
| Fortition | p. 52 |
| Exercises | p. 53 |
| New palatal consonants | p. 56 |
| About palatal articulation | p. 56 |
| Yods old and new | p. 57 |
| Yods and the growth of new consonants | p. 58 |
| Charles and Charlotte | p. 72 |
| Exercises | p. 74 |
| More about vowels: raising, yod effects, and nasalization | p. 77 |
| Vowel raising in Italian | p. 77 |
| Yod effects in Spanish | p. 80 |
| Yod effects in French | p. 86 |
| Nasal vowels in French | p. 91 |
| Exercises | p. 92 |
| Verb morphology: the present indicative | p. 95 |
| Infinitives | p. 95 |
| Present indicative in Popular versus standard Latin | p. 99 |
| Present indicative in Italian | p. 100 |
| Present indicative in Spanish | p. 102 |
| Present indicative in French | p. 103 |
| Stem allomorphy in the present indicative | p. 104 |
| Paradigm leveling | p. 112 |
| Paradigm disleveling | p. 116 |
| A stem extender: -sc- | p. 118 |
| Some truly irregular verbs: be, have, go | p. 119 |
| Exercises | p. 123 |
| Verb morphology: systemic reorganization | p. 127 |
| Map of the Latin verb system | p. 127 |
| How Romance reorganizes the Latin system | p. 130 |
| Present indicative and present subjunctive | p. 133 |
| Imperfect indicative | p. 140 |
| Perfect indicative: Romance synthetic past | p. 144 |
| Imperfect subjunctive | p. 158 |
| Future subjunctive | p. 162 |
| Future and conditional | p. 163 |
| A bombshell: the birth of periphrastic perfects | p. 169 |
| The passive voice | p. 174 |
| Past participles old and new | p. 176 |
| Exercises | p. 180 |
| Noun and adjective morphology | p. 185 |
| The starting-point Latin noun and adjective morphology | p. 185 |
| From five to three declension classes | p. 186 |
| From six to two cases | p. 187 |
| Romance noun and adjective morphology | p. 188 |
| The neuter diaspora: from three to two genders | p. 192 |
| Toward gender marking | p. 195 |
| Imparisyllabic nouns and adjectives | p. 196 |
| Romance personal pronouns | p. 198 |
| Birth of the definite article | p. 203 |
| Exercises | p. 206 |
| History and structure of Portuguese: in overview | p. 209 |
| Stressed vowels: the seven-vowel system | p. 209 |
| More on stressed vowels- secondary diphthongs | p. 212 |
| More on stressed vowels: nasalization | p. 215 |
| Raising effects | p. 217 |
| Early changes in consonants | p. 217 |
| Consonant weakening and strengthening | p. 219 |
| New palatal consonants | p. 222 |
| Noun and adjective morphology | p. 228 |
| Verb morphology: infinitives | p. 234 |
| Verb morphology: present indicative | p. 234 |
| Paradigm leveling and disleveling | p. 240 |
| A stem extender: -sc- | p. 240 |
| Some truly irregular verbs: be, have, go | p. 241 |
| Verbs: old categories with inherited morphology | p. 242 |
| Verbs: new periphrastic | p. 246 |
| Verbs: other new categories | p. 248 |
| Exercises | p. 250 |
| History and structure of Romanian: an overview | p. 252 |
| Romanian vowels: diachrony and synchrony | p. 252 |
| Syllable structure: conservatism and innovation | p. 260 |
| Palatal influences on consonants | p. 261 |
| Other consonant changes | p. 263 |
| Present indicative and subjunctive | p. 267 |
| Verb morphology: systemic reorganization | p. 274 |
| Noun and adjective morphology | p. 279 |
| Exercises | p. 284 |
| Formation of the Romance lexicon | p. 287 |
| Lexical competition and replacement | p. 287 |
| Exploiting the derivational resources of Latin | p. 289 |
| Cycles of added and lost meaning | p. 300 |
| Reanalysis: how the mind remakes words | p. 304 |
| Loan words | p. 306 |
| Exercises | p. 314 |
| Emergence of the Romance vernaculars | p. 317 |
| Language in the Carolingian world | p. 317 |
| The earliest Romance texts | p. 323 |
| Conclusion from dialects to standards | p. 330 |
| Exercises | p. 335 |
| Notes | p. 339 |
| Glossary of linguistic terms | p. 353 |
| Suggestions for further reading | p. 360 |
| Works cited | p. 364 |
| Index | p. 372 |
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