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Sievers's law

Sievers's law in Indo-European linguistics accounts for the pronunciation of a consonant cluster with a glide (*w or *y) before a vowel as it was affected by the phonetics of the preceding syllable. Specifically, it refers to the alternation between *iy and *y, and possibly *uw and *w as conditioned by the weight of the preceding syllable. For instance, Proto-Indo-European (PIE) *kor-yo-s became Proto-Germanic *harjaz, Gothic harjis "army", but PIE *ḱerdh-yo-s became Proto-Germanic *hirdijaz, Gothic hairdeis /hɛrdiːs/ "shepherd". It differs from ablaut in that the alternation has no morphological relevance but is phonologically context-sensitive: PIE *iy followed a heavy syllable (a syllable with a diphthong or long vowel, or ending in more than one consonant), but *y would follow a light syllable (a short vowel followed by a single consonant).

History edit

Discovery edit

This situation was first noticed by the Germanic philologist Eduard Sievers (1859-1932), and his aim was to account for certain phenomena in the Germanic languages. He originally discussed only *y in medial position. He also noted, almost as an aside, that something similar seemed to be going on in the earliest Sanskrit texts. Thus in the Rigveda dāivya- "divine" actually had three syllables in scansion (dāiviya-) but satya- "true" was scanned as written.

Extension to other branches edit

After Sievers, scholars would find similar alternations in Greek and Latin, and alternation between *uw and *u, though the evidence is poor for all of these. Through time, evidence was announced regarding similar alternations of syllabicity in the nasal and liquid consonants, though the evidence is extremely poor for these, despite the fact that such alternations would have left permanent, indeed irreversible, traces.[citation needed] For example, the Sanskrit "tool-suffix" -tra- (e.g. pā-tra- "drinking cup, vessel") almost always follows a consonant or long vowel and should have therefore been -tira-; but no such form as **pōtira-, either written as such or scanned thus, is actually attested in the Rigveda or any other Indic text. How a nearly universal suffix **-tira- would have been, or even could have been, uniformly replaced by -tra- is unobvious.

Edgerton edit

The most ambitious extension of Sievers's law was proposed by Franklin Edgerton (1885–1963) in a pair of articles in the journal Language (Edgerton 1934 and Edgerton 1943). He argued that not only was the syllabicity of prevocalic consonants by context applicable to all six Indo-European sonorants (*l *m *n *r *w *y), it was applicable in all positions in the word. Thus a form like *dyēws "sky" would have been pronounced like this only when it happened to follow a word ending with a short vowel. Everywhere else it would have had two syllables, *diyēws. Edgerton also maintained that the phonotactic rules in question applied to sequences arising across morpheme boundaries, such as when the bahuvrīhi prefix *su- occurred before a noun beginning with *w- (e.g. *su-wiHro- "well-heroed", Vedic suvīra-). According to Edgerton, the word should have had two forms, depending on what immediately preceded it: *suwiHro- and *swiHro-. This corollary he called the "converse" to Sievers's law, and is usually referred to as Edgerton's converse for short.

The evidence for alternation presented by Edgerton was of two sorts. He cited several hundred passages from the Rigveda, which he claimed should be rescanned to reveal hitherto unnoticed expressions of the syllable structure called for by his theory. But most forms show no such direct expressions; for them, Edgerton noted sharply skewed distributions that he interpreted as evidence for a lost alternation between syllabic and nonsyllabic consonants (commonly called "semivowels" in the literature). Thus say śiras "head" (from *śr̥ros) has no monosyllabic partner **śras (from **śros), but Edgerton noted that śiras occurred 100% of the time in the environments where his theory called for the syllabification of the *r. Appealing to the "formulaic" nature of oral poetry, especially in tricky and demanding literary forms like sacred Vedic versification, he reasoned that this was direct evidence for the previous existence of an alternant *śras, on the assumption that when (for whatever reason) this *śras and other forms like it came to be shunned, the typical collocations in which they would have (correctly) occurred inevitably became obsolete at the same time as the loss of the form itself. And he was able to present a sizeable body of evidence in the form of these skewed distributions in both the 1934 and 1943 articles.

Edgerton's claims were immediately hailed by many in the scholarly community and enjoyed the status of orthodoxy among Indo-Europeanists for 35 or 40 years;[citation needed] in recent times they have not fared so well.

Parenthetically, many of Edgerton's data on this point are inappropriate: current scholarship takes śiras, for example, to be the regular reflex of PIE *ḱr̥Hos, the syllabicity of the resonant resulting from the fact that it was followed by a consonant in Proto-Indo-European; there never was, nor could have been, a form **ḱros to yield Indic **śras. How it might be that a form that is irrelevant to Edgerton's theory might seem to "behave" in accord with it is explained below.

Lindeman edit

In 1965, Fredrik Otto Lindeman (1936–) published an article (Lindeman 1965) proposing a significant modification of Edgerton's theory. Disregarding Edgerton's evidence (on the grounds that he was not prepared to judge the niceties of Rigvedic scansion) he took instead as the data to be analyzed the scansions in Hermann Grassmann's Wörterbuch zum Rig-Veda (Grassmann 1873). From these he concluded that Edgerton had been right, but only up to a point: the alternations he postulated did indeed apply to all sonorants; but in word-initial position, the alternation was limited to forms like *dyēws/diyēws "sky", as cited above – that is, words where the "short" form was monosyllabic.

Newer developments edit

Edgerton's claims, once very generally hailed, have not fared well. Regarding the skewed distributions in the Rigveda, Edgerton neglected to test his observations against controls, namely forms not susceptible to his theory but sharing other properties with the "test" forms such as part of speech, metrical configuration, and so on. The first scholar to look at controls was Franklin Eugene Horowitz (Horowitz 1974, but whose work actually dates from ten years earlier). Horowitz noted that for example all 65 occurrences of Vedic suvīra- "well-heroed" do occur in line-initial position or follow a heavy syllable (as if in accord with Edgerton's converse), but exactly the same thing is true of e.g. supatrá- "having beautiful wings" (which can have nothing to do with Edgerton's law). And indeed such skewing in distribution is pervasive in Vedic vocabulary: śatam "100", and dozens of other forms with no bearing on Edgerton's law, have exactly the same strong preference for not following a word ending with a short vowel that e.g. śiras "head" does, presumably by reason of beginning with a single consonant followed by a light syllable.

A second difficulty has emerged much more recently (Sihler 2006): The actual passages from the Rigveda cited in Edgerton's two large articles in 1934 and 1943 as examples of the effects of his theory in action seriously misrepresent the facts in all but a handful of cases. No more than three Rigvedic passages cited in the 1934 article, and none at all in 1943, actually support the claims of Edgerton's law regarding word-initial sequences. This lies well within the operation of pure chance. And it has been shown also that the apparent success of Lindeman's more modest claims are not without troubling problems, too, such as the limitation of the reliable examples to semivowels (the glides *y and *w) even though such alternations in the other four consonants should have left robust outcomes (for example, a disyllabic form of prá "forth, away" should have been very much more frequent than the monosyllable, which would have occurred only after a word ending in a short vowel; but there is no evidence for such a disyllabic form as **pirá, in Vedic or any other form of Indic); and that the syllabified alternants (e.g. *diyēws) are very much rarer than they should be: they account for only fifteen to twenty percent of the total: they should account for at least eighty percent, since the monosyllabic form would have originally occurred, like prá, only after a word ending in a short vowel. Further, only the *diyēws alternants have a "distribution": the *dyēws shapes show no sensitivity to phonetic environment at all. (And even that disyllabic "distribution" can be inexplicable: disyllabic dyāus in the Rigveda always and only, with one exception, occurs in line-initial position, i.e., in only one of the four environments calling for syllabification of the resonant. Nothing in Lindeman's theory accounts for this striking distribution.)

Sievers's law in Germanic edit

Within the context of Indo-European, Sievers's law is generally held to be one-way.[1] That is, it applied only to create syllabic resonants from nonsyllabics after heavy syllables, but not the other way around after light syllables. In Proto-Germanic, however, the law came to be applied in both directions, with PIE syllabic *-iy- becoming nonsyllabic *-y- after light syllables. As a consequence, suffixal -j- and -ij- came to be in complementary distribution in Proto-Germanic, and were perceived as allophonic variants of the same suffix with the former following light syllables and the latter, heavy. Following the loss of j intervocalically, -ī- (from earlier -iji-) was also complementary to -i- in inflected forms.

The alternation is preserved in many of the older languages. In addition to the Gothic nouns cited above, Gothic strong adjectives show a light suffix -ji- following a light stem, yielding the nominative singular masculine midjis "middle", while a heavy suffix -ī- (from -iji-/-ija-) follows a long stem: wilþeis /wilþīs/ "wild".

In Old Norse, nonsyllabic -j- is preserved word-medially, but syllabic -ij- is lost like all other medial-syllable vowels. This is seen in class 1 weak verbs, which end in -ja (from Germanic *-janą) following a short stem, but in -a (from Germanic *-ijaną) following a long stem. Word-finally, the distribution is reversed. For example, following the loss of final -ą, this left neuter ja-stem nouns with syllabic -i (from *-iją) after long stems but no ending (from *-ją) after short stems.

The West Germanic languages such as English largely lost the alternation because of the effects of the West Germanic gemination, but the gemination itself was conditioned only by -j- and not by -ij-, so that the alternation is indirectly preserved. There is also some evidence that the alternation was preserved and adapted to the new syllable structure that resulted from the gemination. In the oldest attested languages, medial syllabic -ij- tends to be lost in the same way as in Old Norse, while nonsyllabic -j- (occurring only after -r-, which was not geminated) is preserved. Compare for example:

  • Originally heavy syllable: Old English fēran, Old High German fuoren, Old Norse fœra < Proto-Germanic *fōrijaną
  • Originally light syllable with gemination: Old English settan, Old High German sezzen, Old Norse setja < Proto-Germanic *satjaną
  • Originally light syllable with no gemination: Old English werian, Old High German werien, Old Norse verja < Proto-Germanic *warjaną

It has been argued[by whom?] that Sievers's law is actually an innovation of Germanic. The reasons for this are two distinct innovations pertaining to Sievers's law outcomes. The first is that the law works in both directions, not only yielding *-iya- following long stems, but instigating the reverse, decrementing etymological *-iya- to *-ya- following short stems. The second is an enlarged environment for the transformation. In Germanic, the syllabic shape *-iy- is found not only after heavy syllables, as in Vedic, but also after some polysyllabic stems. This is quite unlike anything in Indic.

The imposed conditions for the Sievers's law reversal are specifically Germanic, not Proto-Indo-European. Thus the following two verb forms show normal Germanic distributions in good order: Proto-Germanic *wurkīþi "(s)he works", *wurkijanþi "they work" become Gothic waurkeiþ /workīþ/, waurkjand (Gothic makes no distinction between -ij- and -j- in writing); and Proto-Germanic *satiþi "(s)he sets", *satjanþi "they set" become Gothic satjiþ, satjand. But the forms in their Proto-Indo-European shape were *wr̥g-yé-ti, *wr̥g-yó-nti and *sod-éye-ti, *sod-éyo-nti respectively. Without Sievers's influence these would pass etymologically into Germanic as **wurkiþi, **wurkjanþi and **satīþi, **satijanþi. The regular Germanic evolution of *ur from * made a light root syllable heavy, and thus *wr̥g- > *wurk- created a triggering environment for a heavy suffix, *-iji-/*-ī-, yielding Gothic waurkeiþ. The opposite occurred regarding satjiþ, where the etymological *-iji-/*-ī- (PIE *-eye-) was decremented to *-i- because the light syllable created the environment for a light suffix. So, a Proto-Germanic *satijiþi was turned to *satjiþi by Sievers's reversal, which in turn was simplified prehistorically to *satiþi. Gothic re-inserts the -j- via analogy, yielding satjiþ (contrast Old English bideð, which does not re-insert the -j- therefore not yielding **biddeð). Hence, not only are Proto-Indo-European structures not needed to account for the facts of Germanic, they actually get in the way.

Donald Ringe, in his book "From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic", characterizes the origins of the different features as follows:

  1. Sievers's law operates as a "surface filter"; therefore the objection concerning PIE *wr̥g-yé-ti vs. Proto-Germanic *wurkīþi is not valid. That is, Sievers's law was not a sound change that took place at some particular time, but rather a phonological law that remained in the grammar of the language over time and operated on the output of various phonological processes.[2] When PIE * changed to *ur in Proto-Germanic, Sievers's law automatically changed forms such as **wurg-yé-ti to *wurg-iyé-ti.[2]
  2. The converse of Sievers's law – which changes *iy to *y after a light syllable – was indeed a Germanic innovation that did not apply to PIE. Essentially, Proto-Germanic inherited Sievers's law from PIE and then extended it to apply in both directions. This answers the concern about *satiþi vs. *sod-éye-ti.[3]
  3. The extension of the Sievers's-law variant *-iy- to polysyllabic as well as heavy-syllable stems was another Germanic innovation.

Sievers's law in Germanic was clearly conditioned on morphological grounds as well as phonological, since suffixes were treated as separate words if they were recognised as separate morphological segments. For example, the suffix *-atjaną had a nonsyllabic -j- because the preceding -at- was light, as in Old English -ettan, where the gemination is evidence for -j-.[4] On the other hand, *-ārijaz had -ij- because the syllable -ār- was heavy, as in Gothic -areis, which would have been *-arjis if the suffix had contained -j- instead. This happened even though in fully formed words these -j- and -ij- would have been preceded by two syllables. Examples of the opposite - that is, multiple-syllable stems that were not segmentable - can also be found. *hamiþiją ("shirt") clearly contained -ij-, showing that *hamiþ- in its entirety was analysed as the stem, rather than just *-iþ- since there was no such suffix in Proto-Germanic. This is evidenced by the Old High German hemidi, where *hemiddi would be expected if the original form had -j-.

References edit

  1. ^ Ringe 2006, pp. 16–17.
  2. ^ a b Ringe 2006, p. 120.
  3. ^ Ringe 2006, p. 121.
  4. ^ Ringe 2006, p. 130.

Bibliography edit

  • Edgerton, Franklin (1934), "Sievers's Law and IE. weak grade vocalism", Language, 10 (3): 235–265, doi:10.2307/409474, JSTOR 409474
  • Edgerton, Franklin (1943), "The Indo-European Semivowels", Language, 19 (2): 83–124, doi:10.2307/409841, JSTOR 409841
  • Fabb, Nigel (1997), Linguistics and Literature, Blackwell Publishing, ISBN 0-631-19242-5
  • Fortson, Benjamin W. (2004), Indo-European Language and Culture, Blackwell Publishing, ISBN 1-4051-0316-7
  • Grassmann, Hermann (1873), Wörterbuch zum Rig-Veda, Leipzig: Brockhaus
  • Horowitz, Franklin Eugene (1974), Sievers' Law and the Evidence of the Rigveda, Janua Linguarum, Series Practica, vol. 216, The Hague: Mouton de Gruyter
  • Kiparsky, Paul (2000), "Analogy as optimization: 'exceptions' to Sievers' law in Gothic" (PDF), in Lahiri, Aditi (ed.), Analogy, levelling, markedness: Principles of change in phonology and morphology, Trends in linguistics: Studies and monographs, vol. 127, Mouton de Gruyter, ISBN 3-11-017552-5
  • Lindeman, Frederik Otto (1965), "Le loi de Sievers et le début du mot en indo-européen", Norsk Tidsskrift for Sprogvidenskap, 20: 38–108
  • Ringe, Donald (2006), A History of English, Volume I: From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic, Oxford University Press US, ISBN 0-19-928413-X
  • Sihler, Andrew L. (1969), "Sievers–Edgerton Phenomena and Rigvedic Meter", Language, 45 (2): 248–73, doi:10.2307/411659, JSTOR 411659
  • Sihler, Andrew L. (1971), "Word-Initial Semivowel Alternation in the Rigveda", Language, 47 (1): 53–78, doi:10.2307/412188, JSTOR 412188
  • Sihler, Andrew L. (1995), New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin, Oxford University Press US, ISBN 0-19-508345-8
  • Sihler, Andrew L. (2006), Edgerton's Law: The Phantom Evidence, Universitätsverlag Winter, ISBN 3-8253-5167-X

sievers, principle, physical, metallurgy, sieverts, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear, because, lacks, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, cit. For the principle in physical metallurgy see Sieverts s law This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message This article contains characters used to write reconstructed Proto Indo European words for an explanation of the notation see Proto Indo European phonology Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode combining characters and Latin characters Sievers s law in Indo European linguistics accounts for the pronunciation of a consonant cluster with a glide w or y before a vowel as it was affected by the phonetics of the preceding syllable Specifically it refers to the alternation between iy and y and possibly uw and w as conditioned by the weight of the preceding syllable For instance Proto Indo European PIE kor yo s became Proto Germanic harjaz Gothic harjis army but PIE ḱerdh yo s became Proto Germanic hirdijaz Gothic hairdeis hɛrdiːs shepherd It differs from ablaut in that the alternation has no morphological relevance but is phonologically context sensitive PIE iy followed a heavy syllable a syllable with a diphthong or long vowel or ending in more than one consonant but y would follow a light syllable a short vowel followed by a single consonant Contents 1 History 1 1 Discovery 1 2 Extension to other branches 1 3 Edgerton 1 4 Lindeman 1 5 Newer developments 2 Sievers s law in Germanic 3 References 4 BibliographyHistory editDiscovery edit This situation was first noticed by the Germanic philologist Eduard Sievers 1859 1932 and his aim was to account for certain phenomena in the Germanic languages He originally discussed only y in medial position He also noted almost as an aside that something similar seemed to be going on in the earliest Sanskrit texts Thus in the Rigveda daivya divine actually had three syllables in scansion daiviya but satya true was scanned as written Extension to other branches edit After Sievers scholars would find similar alternations in Greek and Latin and alternation between uw and u though the evidence is poor for all of these Through time evidence was announced regarding similar alternations of syllabicity in the nasal and liquid consonants though the evidence is extremely poor for these despite the fact that such alternations would have left permanent indeed irreversible traces citation needed For example the Sanskrit tool suffix tra e g pa tra drinking cup vessel almost always follows a consonant or long vowel and should have therefore been tira but no such form as pōtira either written as such or scanned thus is actually attested in the Rigveda or any other Indic text How a nearly universal suffix tira would have been or even could have been uniformly replaced by tra is unobvious Edgerton edit The most ambitious extension of Sievers s law was proposed by Franklin Edgerton 1885 1963 in a pair of articles in the journal Language Edgerton 1934 and Edgerton 1943 He argued that not only was the syllabicity of prevocalic consonants by context applicable to all six Indo European sonorants l m n r w y it was applicable in all positions in the word Thus a form like dyews sky would have been pronounced like this only when it happened to follow a word ending with a short vowel Everywhere else it would have had two syllables diyews Edgerton also maintained that the phonotactic rules in question applied to sequences arising across morpheme boundaries such as when the bahuvrihi prefix su occurred before a noun beginning with w e g su wiHro well heroed Vedic suvira According to Edgerton the word should have had two forms depending on what immediately preceded it suwiHro and swiHro This corollary he called the converse to Sievers s law and is usually referred to as Edgerton s converse for short The evidence for alternation presented by Edgerton was of two sorts He cited several hundred passages from the Rigveda which he claimed should be rescanned to reveal hitherto unnoticed expressions of the syllable structure called for by his theory But most forms show no such direct expressions for them Edgerton noted sharply skewed distributions that he interpreted as evidence for a lost alternation between syllabic and nonsyllabic consonants commonly called semivowels in the literature Thus say siras head from sr ros has no monosyllabic partner sras from sros but Edgerton noted that siras occurred 100 of the time in the environments where his theory called for the syllabification of the r Appealing to the formulaic nature of oral poetry especially in tricky and demanding literary forms like sacred Vedic versification he reasoned that this was direct evidence for the previous existence of an alternant sras on the assumption that when for whatever reason this sras and other forms like it came to be shunned the typical collocations in which they would have correctly occurred inevitably became obsolete at the same time as the loss of the form itself And he was able to present a sizeable body of evidence in the form of these skewed distributions in both the 1934 and 1943 articles Edgerton s claims were immediately hailed by many in the scholarly community and enjoyed the status of orthodoxy among Indo Europeanists for 35 or 40 years citation needed in recent times they have not fared so well Parenthetically many of Edgerton s data on this point are inappropriate current scholarship takes siras for example to be the regular reflex of PIE ḱr Hos the syllabicity of the resonant resulting from the fact that it was followed by a consonant in Proto Indo European there never was nor could have been a form ḱros to yield Indic sras How it might be that a form that is irrelevant to Edgerton s theory might seem to behave in accord with it is explained below Lindeman edit In 1965 Fredrik Otto Lindeman 1936 published an article Lindeman 1965 proposing a significant modification of Edgerton s theory Disregarding Edgerton s evidence on the grounds that he was not prepared to judge the niceties of Rigvedic scansion he took instead as the data to be analyzed the scansions in Hermann Grassmann s Worterbuch zum Rig Veda Grassmann 1873 From these he concluded that Edgerton had been right but only up to a point the alternations he postulated did indeed apply to all sonorants but in word initial position the alternation was limited to forms like dyews diyews sky as cited above that is words where the short form was monosyllabic Newer developments edit Edgerton s claims once very generally hailed have not fared well Regarding the skewed distributions in the Rigveda Edgerton neglected to test his observations against controls namely forms not susceptible to his theory but sharing other properties with the test forms such as part of speech metrical configuration and so on The first scholar to look at controls was Franklin Eugene Horowitz Horowitz 1974 but whose work actually dates from ten years earlier Horowitz noted that for example all 65 occurrences of Vedic suvira well heroed do occur in line initial position or follow a heavy syllable as if in accord with Edgerton s converse but exactly the same thing is true of e g supatra having beautiful wings which can have nothing to do with Edgerton s law And indeed such skewing in distribution is pervasive in Vedic vocabulary satam 100 and dozens of other forms with no bearing on Edgerton s law have exactly the same strong preference for not following a word ending with a short vowel that e g siras head does presumably by reason of beginning with a single consonant followed by a light syllable A second difficulty has emerged much more recently Sihler 2006 The actual passages from the Rigveda cited in Edgerton s two large articles in 1934 and 1943 as examples of the effects of his theory in action seriously misrepresent the facts in all but a handful of cases No more than three Rigvedic passages cited in the 1934 article and none at all in 1943 actually support the claims of Edgerton s law regarding word initial sequences This lies well within the operation of pure chance And it has been shown also that the apparent success of Lindeman s more modest claims are not without troubling problems too such as the limitation of the reliable examples to semivowels the glides y and w even though such alternations in the other four consonants should have left robust outcomes for example a disyllabic form of pra forth away should have been very much more frequent than the monosyllable which would have occurred only after a word ending in a short vowel but there is no evidence for such a disyllabic form as pira in Vedic or any other form of Indic and that the syllabified alternants e g diyews are very much rarer than they should be they account for only fifteen to twenty percent of the total they should account for at least eighty percent since the monosyllabic form would have originally occurred like pra only after a word ending in a short vowel Further only the diyews alternants have a distribution the dyews shapes show no sensitivity to phonetic environment at all And even that disyllabic distribution can be inexplicable disyllabic dyaus in the Rigveda always and only with one exception occurs in line initial position i e in only one of the four environments calling for syllabification of the resonant Nothing in Lindeman s theory accounts for this striking distribution Sievers s law in Germanic editWithin the context of Indo European Sievers s law is generally held to be one way 1 That is it applied only to create syllabic resonants from nonsyllabics after heavy syllables but not the other way around after light syllables In Proto Germanic however the law came to be applied in both directions with PIE syllabic iy becoming nonsyllabic y after light syllables As a consequence suffixal j and ij came to be in complementary distribution in Proto Germanic and were perceived as allophonic variants of the same suffix with the former following light syllables and the latter heavy Following the loss of j intervocalically i from earlier iji was also complementary to i in inflected forms The alternation is preserved in many of the older languages In addition to the Gothic nouns cited above Gothic strong adjectives show a light suffix ji following a light stem yielding the nominative singular masculine midjis middle while a heavy suffix i from iji ija follows a long stem wiltheis wilthis wild In Old Norse nonsyllabic j is preserved word medially but syllabic ij is lost like all other medial syllable vowels This is seen in class 1 weak verbs which end in ja from Germanic jana following a short stem but in a from Germanic ijana following a long stem Word finally the distribution is reversed For example following the loss of final a this left neuter ja stem nouns with syllabic i from ija after long stems but no ending from ja after short stems The West Germanic languages such as English largely lost the alternation because of the effects of the West Germanic gemination but the gemination itself was conditioned only by j and not by ij so that the alternation is indirectly preserved There is also some evidence that the alternation was preserved and adapted to the new syllable structure that resulted from the gemination In the oldest attested languages medial syllabic ij tends to be lost in the same way as in Old Norse while nonsyllabic j occurring only after r which was not geminated is preserved Compare for example Originally heavy syllable Old English feran Old High German fuoren Old Norse fœra lt Proto Germanic fōrijana Originally light syllable with gemination Old English settan Old High German sezzen Old Norse setja lt Proto Germanic satjana Originally light syllable with no gemination Old English werian Old High German werien Old Norse verja lt Proto Germanic warjana It has been argued by whom that Sievers s law is actually an innovation of Germanic The reasons for this are two distinct innovations pertaining to Sievers s law outcomes The first is that the law works in both directions not only yielding iya following long stems but instigating the reverse decrementing etymological iya to ya following short stems The second is an enlarged environment for the transformation In Germanic the syllabic shape iy is found not only after heavy syllables as in Vedic but also after some polysyllabic stems This is quite unlike anything in Indic The imposed conditions for the Sievers s law reversal are specifically Germanic not Proto Indo European Thus the following two verb forms show normal Germanic distributions in good order Proto Germanic wurkithi s he works wurkijanthi they work become Gothic waurkeith workith waurkjand Gothic makes no distinction between ij and j in writing and Proto Germanic satithi s he sets satjanthi they set become Gothic satjith satjand But the forms in their Proto Indo European shape were wr g ye ti wr g yo nti and sod eye ti sod eyo nti respectively Without Sievers s influence these would pass etymologically into Germanic as wurkithi wurkjanthi and satithi satijanthi The regular Germanic evolution of ur from r made a light root syllable heavy and thus wr g gt wurk created a triggering environment for a heavy suffix iji i yielding Gothic waurkeith The opposite occurred regarding satjith where the etymological iji i PIE eye was decremented to i because the light syllable created the environment for a light suffix So a Proto Germanic satijithi was turned to satjithi by Sievers s reversal which in turn was simplified prehistorically to satithi Gothic re inserts the j via analogy yielding satjith contrast Old English bided which does not re insert the j therefore not yielding bidded Hence not only are Proto Indo European structures not needed to account for the facts of Germanic they actually get in the way Donald Ringe in his book From Proto Indo European to Proto Germanic characterizes the origins of the different features as follows Sievers s law operates as a surface filter therefore the objection concerning PIE wr g ye ti vs Proto Germanic wurkithi is not valid That is Sievers s law was not a sound change that took place at some particular time but rather a phonological law that remained in the grammar of the language over time and operated on the output of various phonological processes 2 When PIE r changed to ur in Proto Germanic Sievers s law automatically changed forms such as wurg ye ti to wurg iye ti 2 The converse of Sievers s law which changes iy to y after a light syllable was indeed a Germanic innovation that did not apply to PIE Essentially Proto Germanic inherited Sievers s law from PIE and then extended it to apply in both directions This answers the concern about satithi vs sod eye ti 3 The extension of the Sievers s law variant iy to polysyllabic as well as heavy syllable stems was another Germanic innovation Sievers s law in Germanic was clearly conditioned on morphological grounds as well as phonological since suffixes were treated as separate words if they were recognised as separate morphological segments For example the suffix atjana had a nonsyllabic j because the preceding at was light as in Old English ettan where the gemination is evidence for j 4 On the other hand arijaz had ij because the syllable ar was heavy as in Gothic areis which would have been arjis if the suffix had contained j instead This happened even though in fully formed words these j and ij would have been preceded by two syllables Examples of the opposite that is multiple syllable stems that were not segmentable can also be found hamithija shirt clearly contained ij showing that hamith in its entirety was analysed as the stem rather than just ith since there was no such suffix in Proto Germanic This is evidenced by the Old High German hemidi where hemiddi would be expected if the original form had j References edit Ringe 2006 pp 16 17 a b Ringe 2006 p 120 Ringe 2006 p 121 Ringe 2006 p 130 Bibliography editEdgerton Franklin 1934 Sievers s Law and IE weak grade vocalism Language 10 3 235 265 doi 10 2307 409474 JSTOR 409474 Edgerton Franklin 1943 The Indo European Semivowels Language 19 2 83 124 doi 10 2307 409841 JSTOR 409841 Fabb Nigel 1997 Linguistics and Literature Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 19242 5 Fortson Benjamin W 2004 Indo European Language and Culture Blackwell Publishing ISBN 1 4051 0316 7 Grassmann Hermann 1873 Worterbuch zum Rig Veda Leipzig Brockhaus Horowitz Franklin Eugene 1974 Sievers Law and the Evidence of the Rigveda Janua Linguarum Series Practica vol 216 The Hague Mouton de Gruyter Kiparsky Paul 2000 Analogy as optimization exceptions to Sievers law in Gothic PDF in Lahiri Aditi ed Analogy levelling markedness Principles of change in phonology and morphology Trends in linguistics Studies and monographs vol 127 Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 017552 5 Lindeman Frederik Otto 1965 Le loi de Sievers et le debut du mot en indo europeen Norsk Tidsskrift for Sprogvidenskap 20 38 108 Ringe Donald 2006 A History of English Volume I From Proto Indo European to Proto Germanic Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 928413 X Sihler Andrew L 1969 Sievers Edgerton Phenomena and Rigvedic Meter Language 45 2 248 73 doi 10 2307 411659 JSTOR 411659 Sihler Andrew L 1971 Word Initial Semivowel Alternation in the Rigveda Language 47 1 53 78 doi 10 2307 412188 JSTOR 412188 Sihler Andrew L 1995 New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 508345 8 Sihler Andrew L 2006 Edgerton s Law The Phantom Evidence Universitatsverlag Winter ISBN 3 8253 5167 X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sievers 27s law amp oldid 1206580831, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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