This thesis gives an account of the alternations that occur in the root forms (in particular, in the triconsonantal verbal root) of Iraqi Arabic (IA) words as a result of morphological affixation (e.g. in the perfective and imperfective paradigm of verbs, nominative and accusative paradigms of nouns and in prepositional cliticization). The phonological alternations studied include vowel deletion, insertion, and lengthening, as well as consonant gemination and glide vocalization.^ In this thesis, the theoretical framework is that of generative phonology. Following Chomsky and Halle (1968), I assume that related words have identical segmental lexical representations down to affixes, and these representations are related to phonetic represe...