Overview
The rule deleted coda fricatives *s orMorphological effects
The law affected the nominative singular forms of the many masculine and feminine nouns whose stem ended in a resonant: * PIE "father" > (Ancient Greek '' patḗr'', Sanskrit '' pitā́'') * PIE "parent" > (Ancient Greek '' genétōr'', Latin '' genitor'') * PIE "earth" > (Ancient Greek '' khthṓn'', Sanskrit '' kṣa'', Hittite '' te-e-kán'') The rule also affected the nominative-accusative forms of neuter plural/collective nouns, which ended in : * PIE "seeds" > > (on ''n''-deletion see below) Also in the third-person plural perfect ending: * PIE */-ers/ (the third-person plural perfect ending) > *-ēr (Latin ''ēr-e'', Hittite ''-er'', ''-ir'') Compare: * PIE "word" > (Latin ''verbum'')Further effects
According to another synchronic PIE phonological rule, word-final *n was deleted after *ō, usually by the operation of Szemerényi's law: * PIE "dog" > > (Sanskrit ''ś(u)vā́'', Old Irish ''cú'') The PIE reconstruction for "heart" is the single instance where *d is deleted after *r, with compensatory lengthening of the preceding vowel. It is not clear whether that is an isolated example or a part of a broader process. * PIE "heart" > (Ancient Greek ''kêr'', Hittite ''ker'')Exceptions
Some cases were apparently not affected by Szemerényi's law: * The accusative plural ''*-ons'' of thematic nominals. * The genitive singular of stems ending in sonorants, such as ''*déms'' "of the house" (fossilised in the phrase ''*dems potis'' "master of the house"). * Secondary 2nd person singular verb ending ''*-s'' with verbs ending in sonorants, such as ''*gʷéms'' (from the root ''*gʷem-'' "to step, to come").Morphologization
In PIE, the resulting long vowels had already begun to spread analogically to other nominative singular forms that were not phonologically justified by the law (PIE 'foot'). The word-final sonorants other than *-n were sometimes dropped as well, which demonstrates that this law was already morphologized in the period of "PIE proper", and the long vowel produced was no longer synchronically viewed as the outcome of a process of fricative deletion. Exceptions to Szemerényi's law are found in word-final: * PIE "woman" > (Old Irish ''bé'') but also *gʷénh₂ (Sanskrit ''jáni'') as well as medial positions: * PIE *gen- > Sanskrit ''janman'', PIE *genh₁- > Sanskrit ''jánitrī'' The forms without a laryngeal are considered to be more archaic and were likely to have been lexicalized at a later stage of PIE.See also
* Stang's lawReferences
* * * Sound laws Proto-Indo-European language {{phonology-stub