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Original Articles

On the Sequence *–ōw– before *j and before Vowel in Germanic

Pages 278-281 | Published online: 16 Jun 2015

  • Winfred P. Lehmann, “Evidence in Germanic,” in Werner Winter, ed., Evidence for Laryngeals (The Hague, 1965), pp. 212–223. The examples discussed here probably do not belong to the cases examined by Lehmann, whose illustrations have different correspondences (i.e., examples of “Verschärfung” in the Old Norse and Gothic cognates, obviously not the case here).
  • Winfred P. Lehmann, “The Proto-Indo-European Resonants in Germanic,” Language, XXXI (1955), 355–366. Also quoted by Edgar Polomé in “The Laryngeal Theory So Far,” in Winter, p. 35.
  • Lehmann, “The Proto-Indo-European Resonants in Germanic,” pp. 362–363. One might also note that OIcel tōja and OS tōgean seem to point to a development similar to that of Gothic, though ō in Old Saxon may be ambiguous (i.e., coming from either *aṷ).
  • Ibid., p. 363.

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