1 / 22

Grimm’s Law

Grimm’s Law . Ryan Cotterell & James Brenner Structure of English. Proto Indo-European (PIE). PIE is the commonly accepted “umbrella” ancestor to the Indo-European languages. Its origins are debated as no substantial record of its history exists.

kyoko
Download Presentation

Grimm’s Law

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Grimm’s Law Ryan Cotterell & James Brenner Structure of English

  2. Proto Indo-European (PIE) • PIE is the commonly accepted “umbrella” ancestor to the Indo-European languages. • Its origins are debated as no substantial record of its history exists. • Most reputable theories date its main existence somewhere between the 7th and 4th millenniums B.C. • Its regions of origin are generally placed in far Eastern Europe around Ukraine, the Balkans, and other Black Sea Regions. • By the 3rd millennium it had probably split into mostly non-mutually intelligible daughter dialects.

  3. Proto – Germanic (PGmc) • Refers to the general ancestor language of all Germanic languages (English, Dutch, German, Swedish, etc.) • Generally accepted that it was not identifiable as a distinct dialect before 500 B.C. • By 200 A.D., the Germanic dialect was classified as “Late – Proto…” or “Late – Common…”

  4. Historical Context of PIE and PGmc • PIE was spoken in a basically pure form until at least the 4thmillenium B.C. • No exact date can be given to specifically separate Proto-Germanic from its earlier roots • However it is clear that PGmc was was not classifiable as a distinct dialect before about 500 B.C. (about 2,500 years ago) • Thus, that leaves at least 3,000 years (roughly 4,000 B.C. to 500 B.C.) that sound changes could have occurred from PIE to PGmc • The most specific and identifiable of which probably occurred within the 1st millennium B.C.

  5. Jacob Grimm (1785-1863) Life + Background • A German lawyer, writer, and linguist. • He is most popularly remembered for his fairy tales, recorded with his brother Wilhelm. • However his most influential work was actually in linguistics with his compilation of the German Dictionary and his identification of the sound shift now named after him.

  6. Grimm’s Work and Career Education Career Worked at several libraries (Kassel, Gottingen) Held positions of Professor and member of the Academy of Sciences in Berlin Was almost always accompanied by his brother Essentially, his jobs gave him continual access to resources to further his work in linguistics and its history • He completed under studies at public schools in Kassel • Went to the University of Marburg where he studied law • Upon attending the lectures of Savigny, Grimm was introduced to the literary sources and historical texts of the lectures. • It was here that Grimm’s interest in the history of languages began

  7. Karl Verner (1846-1896) Life and Background • Danish Linguist • Conducted research in many languages including Slavic and Semitic languages. • His work in Germanic linguistics was actually limited compared to some of his other studies. • However his recognition of the pattern to one of the exceptions of Grimm’s law, dubbed “Verner’s Law,” remains his most famous work.

  8. Modern Indo-European Languages English month Welsh mis Gaelic mí French mois Spanish mes Portuguese mês Italian mese German Monat Dutch maand Swedish månad Polish miesiac Russian myesyats Greek minas Albanian muaj Lithuanian menuo Farsi mâh Hindi mahina Arabic shahr Finnish kuukausi Basque hilabethe Turkish ay Chinese yue

  9. Phonology of PIE

  10. Centum-Satem isogloss • Satem languages delabialized the labiovelars, merging the labiovelars with the pure velars • Satem languages also assibilated the palatals • Centum languages depalatalized the palatals, merging them with the pure velars

  11. Grimm’s Law • The major sound change discovered in linguistics • Instrumental to the creation of the Comparative Method • Established a regular set of correspondences between the Germanic language and the rest of the Centum Isogloss • Divided into three parts

  12. Part One The voiceless stops change into voiceless fricatives *p  f *t  þ *k  x  h *kw xw  hw

  13. Examples Portuguese pé Greek pūs Portuguese três Greek tria Portuguese cão Greek kyon Portuguese que Icelandic hvað English foot Icelandic fótur English three Icelandic þrír English hound Icelandic hundur English what

  14. Part Two Voiced stops change into voiceless stops *b  p *d  t *g  k *gw kw

  15. Examples Latin berber Latin decem Latin gelu English warp Swedish värpa English ten Swedish tio English cold Swedish kall

  16. Part Three Voiced aspirated stops loose aspiration *bh  b *dh  d *gh g *gwh gw

  17. Doublets in English foot 
 mother 
 eight 
 fire 
 three 
 heart 
 knee 
 five 
 kin
 hemp 
 guest 
 pedal 
 maternal
 octagon 
 pyromania 
 triple 
 cardiac 
 genuflect 
 pentagon 
 genus 
 cannabis 
 hostel

  18. Verner’s Law • Grimm’s law contained exceptions • Verner found a pattern among the exceptions • Verner’s Law additionally accounted for the occasional mutation of *s  z in the Germanic Languages. • The ordering of Verner’s Law and Grimm’s Law is unclear

  19. Verner’s Law 1. Grimm’s law only applies to initial consonants and consonants following a stressed syllable 2. In all other circumstances voiceless obstruents become voiced *p b *t  d *k  g *kw gw *s  z

  20. Evidence of Verner’s Law in English PIE root *duk (to lead) – inflection stressed ducere (Latin) tug (English) Grimm’s law predicts /tux/ Verner’s law explains the final /g/

  21. Works Consulted • Ashliman, D.L.. "Grimm Brothers' Home Page". October 22, 2008 <http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/grimm.html>. • "Grimm's Law and Verner's Law". Concordi College. October 22, 2008 <http://www.cord.edu/faculty/sprunger/e315/grimm.htm>. • "Grimm's Law". Univeristy of North Carolina. October 22, 2008 <http://asstudents.unco.edu/faculty/tbredehoft/UNCclasses/ENG419/Grimm.html>. • "Proto Indo European". UTSA. October 22, 2008 <http://colfa.utsa.edu/drinka/pie/pie.html>. • Ringe, Donald. From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic. Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 2006.

More Related