Grimm's law

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Grimm's law

  • from Jacob Grimm, of the "Brothers Grimm"
  • a "law" or rule for sound changes from original Proto-Indo-European language to modern descendent languages

Brothers Grimm[edit | edit source]

  • collected and published old or traditional Germanic fairy tales and stories
    • a collector of traditional stories is called a "folklorist"
  • Wilhelm & Jacob Grimm wrote "Grimms' Fairy Tales"

Jacob Grimm[edit | edit source]

  • Jacob Ludwig Karl Grimm (1785–1863)
    • started a comprehensive German dictionary
    • wrote treatise on German mythology
    • his observations on "sound shifts" is considered the key development into the study of linguistics

Unification of Germany[edit | edit source]

  • Grimm was concerned with development of a common German identity
    • so his work was purposefully aimed at creating that identity
    • the movement is called "German nationalism" for the creation of a German "nation"
  • until the late 19th century, Germany was divided into states, principalities and subordinate regions to other European powers
      • much of southern Germany was part of the Austro-Hungarian empire
      • and eastern Germany was either part of or owned parts of Poland and Bohemia (modern Czech and Slovakia)
    • in the 18th century, the northern German kingdom of Prussia was formed in 1701
    • following the defeat of Napoleon, the "German Confederation" was formed (1815)
      • was a loose joining of 39 independent states, with the Emperor of Austria as its president
    • in 1866, Prussia defeated the Austrians and created a separate North German Confederation
    • following the German defeat of France in 1870 ("Franco-Prussian War"), the German Empire was declared (1871)
      • the King of Prussia, William I was declared Kaiser (from "Caesar") with Berlin as its capital

Grimm's law[edit | edit source]

  • Jacob Grimm was not the first to notice the sound shifts in related European languages
    • however, he was the first to comprehensibly track them
    • he thus constructed a larger theory and set of rules governing those shifts
  • Grimm observed three "phases" of sound changes (called by linguists, a "chain shift")
    • the sound shifts are related to how a sound is made by breath and tongue placement
  • Grimm's law concerns "mechanics" of speech
    • i.e., the way the sound is formed
    • for example,
      • "P" is spoken by closing the lips and breathing out
      • "F" is spoken by closing the top front teeth upon the bottom lip (while not closing the top lip)

Indo-European languages[edit | edit source]

Indo-European Language Family Branches in Eurasia.png
Indo-European Language Family Branches in Eurasia
  • the shifts that Grimm tracked are derived from a common origin language, proto-Indo-European (PIE)
  • the PIE people started in central Eurasia, likely just north of the Black and Caspian seas, starting approx. 3,000 BC
    • they were nomadic herders & raiders
    • having domesticated horses they were highly mobile and successful at war
    • PIE was probably a common language in those areas between 4500 and 2500 BC
  • as the original PIE speakers spread across Eurasia the languages they spoke became regionalized
    • i.e., as they spread apart, they started pronouncing words differently from one another
  • see Indo-European word origins

Cognates[edit | edit source]

  • "cognate" means "related" or "connected"
  • as an adjective, "cognate" indicates that a word is related to or shifted from another word
    • as in, "The English word, 'Father, is cognate with the Latin word, 'Pater'"

"P" to "F" sound[edit | edit source]

  • "pater" (Latin) to "father" (English)
  • "ped" (Greek) or "pous" (Greek) to "foot" (English)
  • "pisces" (Latin") to "fish" (English)
  • "pyre" (Latin) to "fire" (English)

"D" to "T" sound[edit | edit source]

  • asdf

"K" to "HT" sound[edit | edit source]

  • asdf

"T" to "Th" sound[edit | edit source]

  • asdf

"B" to "P" sound[edit | edit source]

  • asdf

"Bh" to "b" sound[edit | edit source]

  • aspirated "Bh" or soft "beh" to hard "B"
    • not in English

"Dh" to "P" sound[edit | edit source]

  • aspirated "Dh" or soft "deh" to hard "D"
    • not in English

"Gh" to "G" sound[edit | edit source]

  • aspirated "Gh" or soft-"geh" to hard "G"
    • not in English