Information | |
---|---|
has gloss | eng: Hirt's law, named after Hermann Hirt who postulated it originally in 1895, is a Balto-Slavic sound law which states in its modern form that the inherited Proto-Indo-European stress would retract to non-ablauting pretonic vowel or a syllabic sonorant if it was followed by a consonantal (non-syllabic) laryngeal that closed the preceding syllable. |
lexicalization | eng: Hirt's law |
instance of | (noun) a family of Indo-European languages including the Slavic and Baltic languages Balto-Slavonic, Balto-Slavic, Balto-Slavic language |
Lexvo © 2008-2025 Gerard de Melo. Contact Legal Information / Imprint