this post was submitted on 26 Oct 2025
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Is the n in Germanic words for ten not just a reflex of m in PIE *dekm̥t?
Ah, yeah, quite possibly, good catch. I suppose it could be either assimilation to final -t before it dropped off, or final nasal merger to -n, a la Greek. I'll check and report back.
Edit: Yeah, you're probably right that it's not series contamination, and is instead just assimilation. Ringe's "From PIE to Proto-Germanic", pg. 81, has the regular outcome of syllabic sonorants as *uX, so -um-, -un-, -ul-, -ur-.
So, while we'd expect dekumt and humda for "ten" and "hundred" (and may indeed have gotten them at some intermediate stage), we instead get tehun and hunda, making this pretty clearly regressive nasal assimilation of place. Note, e.g. *smH- 'summer' giving OE "sumor" instead, so when not before another consonant we don't see the assimilation.
That's what I get for doing off-the-cuff etymology, I suppose.