law$552061$ - translation to ελληνικό
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law$552061$ - translation to ελληνικό

PHONETIC RULE
Edgerton's law; Edgerton's Law; Sievers' Law; Edgerton's converse; Lindeman's law; Sievers’ law; Sievers' law; Sievers's Law; Siever's law; Sievers Law; Siever's Law; Sievers law; Siever law; Siever Law

law      
νομικός
brother in law         
SPOUSE'S SIBLING OR SIBLING'S SPOUSE
Sister-in-law; Brother-in-law; Co-brother-in-law; Brother in law; Brothers-in-law; Sister in law; Sister-in-Law; Brother-in-Law; Sisters-in-law; Siblings-in-law; Bro-law; Wife's sister; Sibling in-law
κουνιάδος, γυναικάδελφος, ανράδελφος
mother in law         
PARENT OF ONE'S SPOUSE
Mother-in-Law; Mother in law; Father-in-Law; Father in law; Mother in Law; Parents-in-law; Parents in law; Law parents; Law-parents; Parent in law; Law-parent; Law parent; Mother-in-law; Father-in-law
πεθερά

Ορισμός

Mariotte's law

Βικιπαίδεια

Sievers's law

Sievers's law in Indo-European linguistics accounts for the pronunciation of a consonant cluster with a glide (*w or *y) before a vowel as it was affected by the phonetics of the preceding syllable. Specifically it refers to the alternation between *iy and *y, and possibly *uw and *w as conditioned by the weight of the preceding syllable. For instance, Proto-Indo-European (PIE) *kor-yo-s became Proto-Germanic *harjaz, Gothic harjis "army", but PIE *ḱerdh-yo-s became Proto-Germanic *hirdijaz, Gothic hairdeis /hɛrdiːs/ "shepherd". It differs from ablaut in that the alternation has no morphological relevance but is phonologically context-sensitive: PIE *iy followed a heavy syllable (a syllable with a diphthong, a long vowel, or ending in more than one consonant), but *y would follow a light syllable (a short vowel followed by a single consonant).