This article examines the syllable structure in Fòʔò, a dialect of Tagbana spoken in Côte d'Ivoire. The underlying syllable structure is limited to C(C)V and V syllable, thus syllables with an onset and syllables consisting with a nucleus and nothing else. The onset can be complex, although it is limited to two positions which are restricted in their order by the sonority sequence principle. By contrast, the surface syllables are the result of phonological changes that take place in specific morphological environments. Vowel deletion happens regularly when two identical vowels are separated by a consonant in the context C1V1.C2V2. there is also a process of liquid deletion that simplifies underlying complex onsets. However, when the complex...