Miller's law (linguistics)

Last updated

Miller's law proposes that an aspirated consonant in Proto-Greek became deaspirated after a nasal consonant ending an accented vowel. It was identified by Indo-Europeanist D. Gary Miller. [1]

Examples:

Counterexamples where, because the accent falls on another syllable or because a laryngeal separates the aspirated consonant from the nasal, the law is not triggered:

Citations

  1. Nikolaev 2023, p. 863–865.
  2. Miller 2014, p. 23.

References