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- Dahls_law abstract "Dahl's law is a sound rule in some of the Northeast Bantu languages, a case of voicing dissimilation. In the history of these languages, a voiceless stop, such as /p t k/, became voiced (/b d ɡ/) when immediately followed by a syllable with another voiceless stop. For example, Nyamwezi has -datu \"three\" where Swahili, a Bantu language that did not undergo Dahl's law, has -tatu, and Shambala has mgate \"bread\" where Swahili has mkate. Dahl's law is the reason for the name Gikuyu when the language prefix normally found in that language is ki- .The law was named in 1903 by Carl Meinhof after the missionary Edmund Dahl, who had discovered it. It is productive in Sukuma, in the Nyanyembe dialect of Nyamwezi, most E50 languages (such as Kikuyu, Embu, Meru/Chuka), some J languages (such as Rwanda, Gusii, Kuria). In other languages the law is no longer productive, but there are indications that it once was (such as in Taita, Kamba/Daisũ, Taveta, Luhya/Logoli). In some neighboring languages (and in other dialects of Nyamwezi) words reflecting Dahl's law are found, but they appear to be transfers from languages in which the law is productive.Dahl's law is often portrayed as the African equivalent of Grassmann's law in Indo-European languages. However, an analogue of Grassmann's law (which is aspiration, not voicing, dissimilation) has taken place in the Bantu language Makhuwa, where it is called Katupha's law.".
- Dahls_law wikiPageID "25394531".
- Dahls_law wikiPageLength "2013".
- Dahls_law wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- Dahls_law wikiPageRevisionID "701107077".
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Aspirated_consonant.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Meinhof.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bantu_languages.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Category:Northeast_Bantu_languages.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sound_laws.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Dissimilation.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Edmund_Dahl.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Grassmanns_law.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Indo-European_languages.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Kikuyu_language.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Makhuwa_language.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Northeast_Bantu_languages.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Nyamwezi_language.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Shambala_language.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Stop_consonant.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Swahili_language.
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLink Voice_(phonetics).
- Dahls_law wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dahl's law".
- Dahls_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Bantu-lang-stub.
- Dahls_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPA.
- Dahls_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Phonology-stub.
- Dahls_law wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Dahls_law subject Category:Bantu_languages.
- Dahls_law subject Category:Northeast_Bantu_languages.
- Dahls_law subject Category:Sound_laws.
- Dahls_law hypernym Rule.
- Dahls_law type Country.
- Dahls_law type Language.
- Dahls_law type Language.
- Dahls_law type Law.
- Dahls_law type Phonetic.
- Dahls_law comment "Dahl's law is a sound rule in some of the Northeast Bantu languages, a case of voicing dissimilation. In the history of these languages, a voiceless stop, such as /p t k/, became voiced (/b d ɡ/) when immediately followed by a syllable with another voiceless stop. For example, Nyamwezi has -datu \"three\" where Swahili, a Bantu language that did not undergo Dahl's law, has -tatu, and Shambala has mgate \"bread\" where Swahili has mkate.".
- Dahls_law label "Dahl's law".
- Dahls_law sameAs Q5208857.
- Dahls_law sameAs Lex_Dahliana.
- Dahls_law sameAs m.09k52xs.
- Dahls_law sameAs Q5208857.
- Dahls_law wasDerivedFrom Dahls_law?oldid=701107077.
- Dahls_law isPrimaryTopicOf Dahls_law.