Eduard Hermann

German linguist
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Quick Facts
Born:
Dec. 19, 1869, Coburg, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha [Germany]
Died:
Feb. 14, 1950, Göttingen, W. Ger. (aged 80)
Notable Works:
“Lautgesetz und Analogie”

Eduard Hermann (born Dec. 19, 1869, Coburg, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha [Germany]—died Feb. 14, 1950, Göttingen, W. Ger.) was a German linguist who specialized in comparative studies of Indo-European languages and whose exhaustive linguistic exegesis of passages from Homer is a model of its kind: Sprachwissenschaftlicher Kommentar zu ausgewählten Stücken aus Homer (1914; “Linguistic Commentary on Selected Passages from Homer”).

In 1931 Hermann published Lautgesetz und Analogie (“Sound Law and Analogy”), which discussed, in part, children’s acquisition of language. He made a useful contribution to German historical linguistics in Herkunft unserer Fragefürwörter (1943; “Origin of Our Interrogative Pronouns”). He also did a significant follow-up study on sound change in a small Swiss village, Charmey. Hermann held professorships successively at the universities of Kiel, Frankfurt, and Göttingen and published papers on widely varying linguistic subjects.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.