||Laut"ver*schie`bung (?), n.; pl.
-schiebungen (&?;). [G.; laut sound +
verschiebung shifting.] (Philol.) (a)
The regular changes which the primitive Indo-European stops, or
mute consonants, underwent in the Teutonic languages, probably as
early as the 3d century b. c. , often called the first
Lautverschiebung, sound shifting, or consonant
shifting. (b) A somewhat similar set of
changes taking place in the High German dialects (less fully in modern
literary German) from the 6th to the 8th century, known as the
second Lautverschiebung, the result of which form the striking
differences between High German and The Low German Languages. The
statement of these changes is commonly regarded as forming part of
Grimm's law, because included in it as originally framed.
||Laut"ver*schie`bung (?), n.; pl.
-schiebungen (&?;). [G.; laut sound +
verschiebung shifting.] (Philol.) (a)
The regular changes which the primitive Indo-European stops, or
mute consonants, underwent in the Teutonic languages, probably as
early as the 3d century b. c. , often called the first
Lautverschiebung, sound shifting, or consonant
shifting. (b) A somewhat similar set of
changes taking place in the High German dialects (less fully in modern
literary German) from the 6th to the 8th century, known as the
second Lautverschiebung, the result of which form the striking
differences between High German and The Low German Languages. The
statement of these changes is commonly regarded as forming part of
Grimm's law, because included in it as originally framed.