Proto-Germanic language

Learn about this topic in these articles:

cases

  • Indo-European languages in contemporary Eurasia
    In Indo-European languages: Changes in morphology

    Proto-Germanic had only six cases, the functions of ablative (place from which) and locative (place in which) being taken over by constructions of preposition plus the dative case. In Modern English these are reduced to two cases in nouns, a general case that does duty…

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comparative reconstruction

consonants

  • Germanic languages in Europe
    In Germanic languages: Consonants

    These changes yielded the following Proto-Germanic system of consonants: voiceless stops and fricatives, *p, *f, *t, *þ, *k, *hx, *kw, *hwxw; voiced stops and fricatives, *bƀ, *dð, *gǥ, (*gwǥw); sibilants, *s, *z; nasals, *m, *n; liquids, *l, *r; and semivowels, *w, *

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Frisian languages

  • Germanic languages in Europe
    In West Germanic languages: History

    …of the nasal sound before Proto-Germanic *f, *þ, and *s (e.g., Proto-Germanic *fimf, *munþ-, and *uns became Old Frisian fīf ‘five,’ mūth ‘mouth,’ and ūs ‘us’), palatalization of Proto-Germanic *k before front vowels and *j (e.g., Proto-Germanic *kinn- and *1kj- became Old Frisian tzin ‘chin’ and lētza ‘physician’ [compare English…

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Germanic peoples

  • Germany
    In Germany: Ancient history

    t, and k became the Proto-Germanic f, [thorn] (th), and x (h), and the Proto-Indo-European b, d, and g became Proto-Germanic p, t, and k. The historical context of the shift is difficult to identify because it is impossible to date it conclusively. Clearly the people who came to speak…

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Gothic language