Optimality theory has spent the past three decades attempting to construct a new framework for phonological considerations. Even if it has not been able to propose a ‘perfect’ theory that fits most data and makes accurate predictions, it has still steered conceptual understandings of phonology and has provided fodder for intense theoretical debate. Essentially, OT has proposed that the underlying representations of sounds/words are input, that are then processed and evaluated until an ideal surface form is found and pushed out (as output). The mode through which these evaluations occur is “constraint-based analysis”. Throughout the process, OT offers an informative display alongside the surface realization form. OT came into discussion as a...