Osthoff's law
Osthoff's law is an Indo-European sound law which states that long vowels shorten when followed by a resonant, followed in turn by another consonant. It is named after German Indo-Europeanist Hermann Osthoff, who first formulated it.
Overview
The law operated in most of the Proto-Indo-European daughter languages, with notable exceptions being the Indo-Iranian and Tocharian branches in which the difference between long and short PIE diphthongs was clearly preserved.Compare:
- PIE *dyēws "skyling, sky god" > Vedic Sanskrit dyā́us, but Ancient Greek wikt:Ζεύς#Ancient Greek, with an ordinary diphthong.
Osthoff's law is, in some version, valid for Greek, Latin, and Celtic but not for Indo-Iranian and Tocharian.
Germanic
Osthoff's law also probably applied in Germanic, although there is very little evidence to support or refute that claim. Some examples might be:- "meat" >
- "young" >
Balto-Slavic
The traditional school of Balto-Slavic linguistics posits compensatory lengthening of liquid diphthongs before laryngeals. Following this, long vowels become acuted, and the long vowels subsequently shorten again due to Osthoff's law, leaving an acuted liquid diphthong. For example:- PIE "birch" > PBSl. *bḗrźas > > Lithuanian, Serbo-Croatian .