- Grimm's law
Grimm's law (also known as the First Germanic Sound Shift or the Rask's-Grimm's rule) named for
Jacob Grimm , is a set of statements describing the inherited Proto-Indo-European (PIE) stops as they developed inProto-Germanic (PGmc, the common ancestor of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European family) in the1st millennium BC . It establishes a set of regular correspondences between early Germanic stops andfricative s and the stop consonants of certain other centumIndo-European languages (Grimm used mostlyLatin and Greek for illustration). As it is presently formulated, Grimm's Law consists of three parts, which must be thought of as three consecutive phases in the sense of achain shift [cite book |last=Campbell |first=Lyle |title=Historical linguistics | edition=2nd ed. |publisher=MIT Press |location=Cambridge |year=2004 |isbn=0262532670 |pages=49] :#Proto-Indo-European voiceless stops change into voiceless
fricatives .
#Proto-Indo-European voiced stops become voiceless stops.
#Proto-Indo-European voiced aspirated stops become voiced fricatives; ultimately, in most Germanic languages these voiced fricatives become voiced stops.The voiced aspirated stops may have first become voiced fricatives before hardening to the voiced unaspirated stops "b", "d", and "g" under certain conditions, however some linguists dispute this. See Proto-Germanic phonology.
Grimm's law was the first non-trivial systematic
sound change to be discovered inlinguistics ; its formulation was a turning point in the development of linguistics, enabling the introduction of a rigorous methodology to historical linguistic research. The "law" was discovered byFriedrich von Schlegel in1806 andRasmus Christian Rask in1818 , and later elaborated (i.e. extended to includestandard German ) in 1822 byJacob Grimm , the elder of theBrothers Grimm , in his book "Deutsche Grammatik".In detail
Further changes following Grimm's Law, as well as sound changes in other Indo-European languages, can sometimes obscure its effects. The most illustrative examples are used here.The most recalcitrant set of apparent exceptions to Grimm's Law, which defied linguists for a few decades, eventually received explanation from the Danish linguist
Karl Verner (see the article onVerner's law for details).Correspondences to PIE
The Germanic "sound laws", combined with regular changes reconstructed for other Indo-European languages, allow one to define the expected sound correspondences between different branches of the family. For example, Germanic (word-initial) *b- corresponds regularly to Latin *f-, Greek "Unicode|pʰ-",
Sanskrit "Unicode|bʰ-", Slavic, Baltic or Celtic "b-", etc., while Germanic *f- corresponds to Latin, Greek, Sanskrit, Slavic and Baltic "p-" and to zero (no initial consonant) in Celtic. The former set goes back to PIE *Unicode|bʰ- (faithfully reflected in Sanskrit and modified in various ways elsewhere), and the latter set to PIE *p- (shifted in Germanic, lost in Celtic, but preserved in the other groups mentioned here).ee also
*
Verner's law
*High German consonant shift
*Glottalic theory
* TheTuscan gorgia , a similar evolution differentiating theTuscan dialect s from Standard Italian.
* The UralicHungarian language was also affected by a similar process, leading to a high frequency of "f" and "h", and can be compared to Finnish, which did not change this way.References
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