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Lachmann's law is a somewhat disputed phonological sound law for Latin named after German Indo-Europeanist Karl Lachmann who first formulated it sometime in the middle of the 19th century. According to it, vowels in Latin lengthen before Proto-Indo-European voiced stops which are followed by another (unvoiced) stop. Compare: * PIE *h₂eǵtos 'led' > āctus (cf. short vowel in Ancient Greek ágō) * PIE *ph₂gtos 'fortified' > pāctus (cf. short vowel in Sanskrit pajrás) * PIE *tegtos 'covered' > tēctus (cf. short vowel in Ancient Greek stégō)

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  • Loi de Lachmann (fr)
  • Lachmann's law (en)
  • Закон Лахмана (ru)
  • Лахманів закон (uk)
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  • On nomme loi de Lachmann un processus régulier d'évolution phonétique concernant le latin, lequel consiste en un allongement de voyelles brèves dans certaines conditions. Elle a été proposée par le philologue allemand Karl Lachmann pour expliquer certaines évolutions de la langue latine. (fr)
  • Ла́хманів зако́н — фонетичний закон у латинській мові, що його 1850 року відкрив . Суть закону полягає в тім, що в латинських дієприкметниках на -tus подовжувався короткий кореневий голосний, якщо дієслівний корінь закінчувався на дзвінкий: * ăgo → āctus; * tĕgo → tectus; * cădo → cāsus (*kadtos). (uk)
  • Зако́н Ла́хмана — фонетический закон, открытый Карлом Лахманом в 1850-м году и актуальный для латинского языка. Согласно этому закону в латинских причастиях перфекта на -tus, гласный корня удлинялся, если корень заканчивался на -b-, -d-, -g-. (ru)
  • Lachmann's law is a somewhat disputed phonological sound law for Latin named after German Indo-Europeanist Karl Lachmann who first formulated it sometime in the middle of the 19th century. According to it, vowels in Latin lengthen before Proto-Indo-European voiced stops which are followed by another (unvoiced) stop. Compare: * PIE *h₂eǵtos 'led' > āctus (cf. short vowel in Ancient Greek ágō) * PIE *ph₂gtos 'fortified' > pāctus (cf. short vowel in Sanskrit pajrás) * PIE *tegtos 'covered' > tēctus (cf. short vowel in Ancient Greek stégō) (en)
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  • Lachmann's law is a somewhat disputed phonological sound law for Latin named after German Indo-Europeanist Karl Lachmann who first formulated it sometime in the middle of the 19th century. According to it, vowels in Latin lengthen before Proto-Indo-European voiced stops which are followed by another (unvoiced) stop. Compare: * PIE *h₂eǵtos 'led' > āctus (cf. short vowel in Ancient Greek ágō) * PIE *ph₂gtos 'fortified' > pāctus (cf. short vowel in Sanskrit pajrás) * PIE *tegtos 'covered' > tēctus (cf. short vowel in Ancient Greek stégō) According to Lachmann's law is an example of a sound law that affects deep phonological structure, not the surface result of phonological rules. In Proto-Indo-European, a voiced stop was already pronounced as voiceless before voiceless stops, as the assimilation by voicedness must have been operational in PIE (*h₂eǵtos → *h₂eḱtos 'forced, made'). Lachmann's law, however, did not act upon the result of the assimilation, but on the deep structure *h₂eǵtos > *agtos > āctus. Indo-Europeanists reject this explanation, generally believing that the voiced finals were analogically restored in the appropriate forms before being deleted again. For example, defends the Neogrammarian analysis of Lachmann's law as analogy followed by sound change (*aktos ⇒ *agtos > *āgtos > āctus). Although this formulation ultimately derives from de Sausurre (1885: 256), Jasanoff's formulation also explains problems such as: * magism̥os > *magsomos > māximus /māksimus/ * aksī- ⇒ *agsī- > āxī- /āksī-/ * pōds > *pōs(s) ⇒ *ped-s > *pēts > pēs(s) The law also does not operate before PIE voiced aspirate stops. Based on this, the glottalic theory reinterprets the law not to reflect lengthening before voiced stops, but before glottalized stops. In that case the assumption that we are dealing with an example of a sound law that affects deep phonological structure is not required. (en)
  • On nomme loi de Lachmann un processus régulier d'évolution phonétique concernant le latin, lequel consiste en un allongement de voyelles brèves dans certaines conditions. Elle a été proposée par le philologue allemand Karl Lachmann pour expliquer certaines évolutions de la langue latine. (fr)
  • Ла́хманів зако́н — фонетичний закон у латинській мові, що його 1850 року відкрив . Суть закону полягає в тім, що в латинських дієприкметниках на -tus подовжувався короткий кореневий голосний, якщо дієслівний корінь закінчувався на дзвінкий: * ăgo → āctus; * tĕgo → tectus; * cădo → cāsus (*kadtos). (uk)
  • Зако́н Ла́хмана — фонетический закон, открытый Карлом Лахманом в 1850-м году и актуальный для латинского языка. Согласно этому закону в латинских причастиях перфекта на -tus, гласный корня удлинялся, если корень заканчивался на -b-, -d-, -g-. (ru)
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