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Miller's law (linguistics)

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Miller's law proposes that an aspirated consonant in Proto-Greek became deaspirated after a nasal consonant ending an accented vowel. It was identified by Indo-Europeanist D. Gary Miller.[1]

Examples:

Counterexamples where, because the accent falls on another syllable or because a laryngeal separates the aspirated consonant from the nasal, the law is not triggered:

  • Greek: ὀμφαλός "navel" < PIE *h₃n̥bʰl-ós
  • Greek: ὀμφή "voice" < PIE *songʷʰ-éh₂
  • Greek: γόμφος "peg" < PIE *ǵónh₂-bʰos (possibly exhibiting the Saussure effect)[2]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ Nikolaev 2023, p. 863–865.
  2. ^ Miller 2014, p. 23.

References

[edit]
  • Batisti, Roberto (July 16–18, 2022). Post-Nasal Deaspiration in Ancient Greek: Mirage or Reality?. 10th International Colloquium on Ancient Greek Linguistics. Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Retrieved November 15, 2024.
  • Miller, D. Gary (2014). Ancient Greek Dialects and Early Authors: Introduction to the Dialect Mixture in Homer, with Notes on Lyric and Herodotus. Boston: De Gruyter. ISBN 978-1-61451-493-0.
  • Nikolaev, Alexander (2023). "New Phrygian ⟨ε⟩δικες, Greek θιγγανω (with remarks on Miller's Law and the treatment of *dʰs in PIE)". Indo-European Linguistics and Classical Philology. 27: 858–879.
  • Probert, Philomen; Willi, Andreas (2012). "A rule of deaspiration in ancient Greek". Laws and Rules in Indo-European. Oxford University Press. pp. 125–133.