Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kluges_law> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 73 of
73
with 100 triples per page.
- Kluges_law abstract "Kluge's law is a controversial Proto-Germanic sound law formulated by Friedrich Kluge. It purports to explain the origin of the Proto-Germanic long consonants *kk, *tt, and *pp (Proto-Indo-European lacked a phonemic length distinction for consonants) as originating in the assimilation of *n to a preceding voiced plosive consonant, under the condition that the *n was part of a suffix which was stressed in the ancestral Proto-Indo-European (PIE). The name "Kluge's law" was coined by Kauffmann (1887) and revived by Frederik Kortlandt (1991). As of 2006, this law has not been generally accepted by historical linguists.The resulting long consonants would subsequently have been shortened, except when they followed a short vowel; this is uncontroversial for *ss (which has a different origin). Proponents of Kluge's law use this to explain why so many Proto-Germanic roots (especially of strong verbs) end in short *p, *t or *k even though their likely cognates in other Indo-European languages point to final Proto-Indo-European (PIE) consonants other than the expected *b, *d, *g or *ǵ. (Indeed, non-Germanic evidence for PIE *b is so rare that *b may not have been a phoneme at all; yet, in Proto-Germanic, *p was only rare at the beginnings of words.)Much like Verner's law, Kluge's law would have created many consonant alternations in the grammatical paradigm of a word that were soon only partially predictable anymore.Template:Huh? Analogical simplifications of these complexities are proposed as an explanation for the many cases where closely related (often otherwise identical) words point to short, long, plosive, fricative, voiceless or voiced Proto-Germanic consonants in closely related Germanic languages or dialects, even sometimes the same dialect.".
- Kluges_law wikiPageID "12838419".
- Kluges_law wikiPageLength "32116".
- Kluges_law wikiPageOutDegree "60".
- Kluges_law wikiPageRevisionID "676673271".
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Assimilation_(linguistics).
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sound_laws.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Cognate.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Consonant_gradation.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Consonant_length.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Dunnock.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Finnic_languages.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Frederik_Kortlandt.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Fricative_consonant.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Kluge.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Gemination.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_Parent_Language.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_parent_language.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_strong_verb.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_substrate_hypothesis.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Grammatischer_Wechsel.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Grimms_law.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Heliand.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink High_German_consonant_shift.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Indo-European_ablaut.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Indo-European_s-mobile.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Indogermanisches_etymologisches_Wörterbuch.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Lithuanian_language.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Dutch.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Middle_English.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Middle_High_German.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Low_German.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Morgunblaðið.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Morpheme.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Morphology_(linguistics).
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Neogrammarian.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Old_High_German.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Old_Norse.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Phoneme.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Proto-Germanic_language.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Proto-Indo-European_accent.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Proto-Indo-European_language.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Proto-Indo-European_phonology.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Sami_languages.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Sanskrit.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Skeireins.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Sound_change.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Sound_law.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Stop_consonant.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Stratum_(linguistics).
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Stress_(linguistics).
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Verners_law.
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLink Voice_(phonetics).
- Kluges_law wikiPageWikiLinkText "Kluge's law".
- Kluges_law hasPhotoCollection Kluges_law.
- Kluges_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:According_to_whom.
- Kluges_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Kluges_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Expand_section.
- Kluges_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Germanic_philology.
- Kluges_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Huh%3F.
- Kluges_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- Kluges_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Kluges_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:When.
- Kluges_law subject Category:Sound_laws.
- Kluges_law hypernym Law.
- Kluges_law type Person.
- Kluges_law comment "Kluge's law is a controversial Proto-Germanic sound law formulated by Friedrich Kluge. It purports to explain the origin of the Proto-Germanic long consonants *kk, *tt, and *pp (Proto-Indo-European lacked a phonemic length distinction for consonants) as originating in the assimilation of *n to a preceding voiced plosive consonant, under the condition that the *n was part of a suffix which was stressed in the ancestral Proto-Indo-European (PIE).".
- Kluges_law label "Kluge's law".
- Kluges_law sameAs m.02x71pd.
- Kluges_law sameAs Q6421481.
- Kluges_law sameAs Q6421481.
- Kluges_law wasDerivedFrom Kluges_lawoldid=676673271.
- Kluges_law isPrimaryTopicOf Kluges_law.