This study is a slightly revised version of the author's 1993 Ph.D. dissertation, University of California at Santa Cruz. Generative Phonological theory has shifted from a focus on ordered rules to well-formedness constraints, giving rise to Optimality Theory, wherein to resolve the conflict between constraints, the constraints are ranked with respect to each other. Lower-ranked constraints are allowed to be violated in order to meet higher-ranked constraints. The output that best satisfies the set of ranked and violable constraints is the optimal representation of the grammar. This study set out to apply these insights of optimization to two sets of data, and in addition, to computationally implement the analyses. Such an implementation pr...