Pedersen's law
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "For". Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Pedersen's law, named after the Danish linguist Holger Pedersen, is a law of accentuation in Balto-Slavic languages which states that the stress was retracted from stressed medial syllables in paradigms with mobile accent.
It was originally proposed by Ferdinand de Saussure for Baltic to explain forms such as Lithuanian Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang". (compare Ancient Greek Template:Tlit), but was later generalized in 1933 to Balto-Slavic by Pedersen, who then assumed that accentual mobility spread from the consonant-stems to Balto-Slavic eh₂-stems and o-stems.
The term "Pedersen's law" is also applied to later Common Slavic developments in which the stress retraction to prefixes/proclitics can be traced in mobile paradigms, such as Russian Template:Tlit 'onto the water', Template:Tlit 'was not', Template:Tlit 'sold', and Template:Tlit 'rein'.
Proto-Indo-European *dʰugh₂tḗr 'daughter', with accusative singular *dʰugh₂térm̥ (Ancient Greek [[:wikt:θυγάτηρ|Template:Tlit]], acc. sg. [[:wikt:θυγατέρα|Template:Tlit]]) > Lithuanian Script error: No such module "Lang"., acc. sg. Script error: No such module "Lang"..
Proto-Indo-European *poh₂imń̥ ~ *poh₂imén 'shepherd' (Ancient Greek [[:wikt:ποιμήν|Template:Tlit]], accusative singular Template:Tlit) > Lithuanian Script error: No such module "Lang"., acc. sg. Script error: No such module "Lang"..
Proto-Indo-European *golHwéh₂ with Balto-Slavic semantics of 'head' > Lithuanian Script error: No such module "Lang". (with accusative singular Script error: No such module "Lang".), Russian [[:wikt:голова|Template:Tlit]] (acc. sg. Template:Tlit), Chakavian Script error: No such module "Lang". (acc. sg. Script error: No such module "Lang".).
Within the relative chronology of Balto-Slavic sound changes, this law was, in its first occurrence in the Balto-Slavic period, posterior to the loss of Proto-Indo-European accentual mobility (i.e. later than the advent of Balto-Slavic mobile paradigms, such as the above-mentioned Lithuanian Script error: No such module "Lang"., as opposed to non-final stress in Ancient Greek etymons), so its application was originally limited to the inflection of polysyllabic consonant stems.
Later the retraction of stress spread by analogy to non-consonant stems in case-forms where Pedersen's law applied (commonly termed "barytonesis"). Thus we have accusative singular forms of Lithuanian Script error: No such module "Lang". 'sheep', Script error: No such module "Lang". 'son', Script error: No such module "Lang". 'god', Script error: No such module "Lang". 'winter'. Afterwards oxytonesis, Hirt's law, and Winter's law applied.
References
- Pedersen, Holger. 1933. Études lituaniennes. København: Levin & Munksgaard.
- Kortlandt, Frederik. 1975. Slavic Accentuation - A Study in Relative Chronology.
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