Linguistics

The law that explained the exceptions to another law

Grimm's Law described how consonants shifted across Germanic languages, but it had puzzling exceptions that stumped linguists for decades. In 1875, Danish linguist Karl Verner showed the exceptions weren't random: Proto-Indo-European accent position determined whether certain Germanic sounds stayed voiceless or turned voiced — proof the Neogrammarians needed that sound laws have no true exceptions.

Karl Verner, Eine Ausnahme der ersten Lautverschiebung — Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung, 23, 97–130 (1877)

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