in the <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> titles. They would certainly help to distinguish words with nasal vowels from words where -n was not lost, too --<span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span> Fan 18:16...
following: Labiovelars were split into a velar and a following labial in <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-West <span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span>. In some cases, this was accompanied by gemination of the velar,...
retained until after they split (this also happens in reconstructing <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span>). It also makes sense because even if these declensions were not very...
For <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span>, we treat terms attested only in West <span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span> as valid <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span> terms, meaning that we consider <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-West-<span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span> to be...
I'm pretty sure that when I first created <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Celtic <span class="searchmatch">entries</span>, the diphthongs ended in u and i and the letter j was used instead of y. Why was this changed...
on plant name <span class="searchmatch">entries</span>, sometimes they do support (haven’t done this on <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Semitic as I remember, but on <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Slavic and <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span> variously, and...
is no cluster *nj in <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Samic, *lj *rj *vj are still found). --Tropylium (talk) 18:42, 24 October 2014 (UTC) <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span> merged inherited *Xʷ (labial-velar...
This creative page needs to specify that all these <span class="searchmatch">entries</span> need to start with "Appendix:<span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Indo-European ". --Connel MacKenzie 20:47, 18 December 2006...
which Wiktionary says: From Old High German triugan, triogan, from <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span> *dreuganan. So it seems iu and io were at least somehow interchangeable...
By this vote, Frankish has become an etymology-only variant of <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-West <span class="searchmatch">Germanic</span>, which is a reconstructed language without attestations. So since ᚨᚾᚾ...