Holtzmann's law
Holtzmann's law is a Proto-Germanic sound law originally noted by Adolf Holtzmann in 1838. The sound law describes the development of Proto-Germanic sequences of intervocalic geminate glides *-ww- and *-jj- in East and North Germanic, i.e. Gothic and Old Norse respectively. It is mainly known by its traditional German name Verschärfung. A similar sound law which has affected modern Faroese, called skerping in Faroese itself, is also known as "Faroese Verschärfung" in English.
Description and occurrences
The law involves the gemination, or doubling, of PIE semivowels *-y- and *-w- in strong prosodic positions into Proto-Germanic -jj- and -ww-, which had two outcomes:- hardening into occlusive onsets:
- * -ggj-/-ggw- in North Germanic;
- * -ddj-/-ggw- in East Germanic
- vocalization of the first semivowel, its addition to a diphthong, and division of the diphthong and remaining semivowel into two separate segments in West Germanic.
The conditions of the sound change were long debated, since there was a seemingly random distribution of affected and unaffected words. At first, dependence on word accent was assumed, parallel to Verner's Law. One solution, first proposed by Smith, postulates dependency on the presence of a PIE laryngeal, which when lost, triggered lengthening as if the semivowels were vowels, and forced them into the syllable margin.
According to Lehmann, the lengthening occurs in the contexts of PIE *-VwH-, *-iyH-, *-ayH-, *-aHy-.
For example, PIE drewh₂yo → early Proto-Germanic trewwjaz 'trustworthy, faithful' →:
- triwwjaz: Old Norse tryggr, Gothic
- *triuwjaz: Old English trēowe, Old High German gitriuwi.
- with hardening:
- * *ajjis: Crimean Gothic ada
- * *ajją: Old Norse egg
- with diphthongization:
- * *aijaz: German Ei, Old English ǣġ