Teeter's law

Teeter's law is an observation about the biases of historical linguists, explaining how different investigators can arrive at radically divergent conceptions of the proto-language of a family:[1][2]

The language of the family you know best always turns out to be the most archaic.

Although the law is named after the Americanist linguist Karl Teeter, it apparently does not appear in any of Teeter's works.[3] It is customarily quoted from a 1976 review of Paul Friedrich's Proto-Indo-European syntax: the order of meaningful elements by the Indo-European linguist Calvert Watkins.[3] Watkins argued that Friedrich's syntactic reconstruction was based entirely on Homeric Greek.[1]

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