Bartholomae's law
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Bartholomae's law, sometimes referred to as the Buddha rule,
Further developments
In both the
In Indic, voiced *z as resulting from Bartholomae's law was devoiced to s, although there is some evidence from the Rigvedic language that a voiced aspirate *z once existed in Indic as well. This is shown by forms like gdha 'he swallowed' and dudukṣa- 'want to give milk' (see below).
Interpretation
A written form such as -ddh- (a literal rendition of the
Bartholomae's law intersects with another Indic development, namely what looks like the deaspiration of aspirated stops in clusters with s: descriptively, Proto-Indo-European *leyǵʰ-si 'you lick' becomes *leyksi, whence Sanskrit lekṣi. However,
Relative chronology
There is no evidence that Bartholomae's law predated Indo-Iranian, that is, that it was a feature of Proto-Indo-European. The Latin form lectus 'couch' and Ancient Greek léktron 'bed' are differently formed but both continue the Proto-Indo-European root *legʰ- 'lie' (the English word being from the same root). But because the Latin would otherwise have resulted in a forbidden cluster (**gt), it may well just be a case of voicing assimilation. In similar combinations arising within Greek, the pattern is for the whole cluster to become aspirated, thus **lékhthron. It obviously does not in this formation, which for other reasons as well is likely to be very old. This may be because the consonant cluster is more complex. In the case of Latin lectus, it is significant that the Proto-Indo-European root *legʰ- does not otherwise survive in Latin at all, so that there can be no history of analogical remodeling or other disturbances. It is not completely clear what the result of a sequence *-gʰdʰ- would have been in Latin, but other evidence suggests lengthening of the vowel plus simplification, so **lēgus[citation needed] (cf. co-āgulum 'rennet' < *-ǎg-dʰlo-, tēgula 'roofing tile' < *tek-dʰlo-).
See also
References
- ISBN 978-90-04-29302-1.
External links
- William H. Bennett The Germanic Evidence for Bartholomae's Law Language, Vol. 42, No. 4 (Dec., 1966), pp. 733–737