Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com

Grassman's law

American  

noun

Linguistics.
  1. an observation, made by H. G. Grassman, that when aspirated consonants occurred in successive syllables in Sanskrit and classical Greek, one, usually the first, was unaspirated, becoming a voiced stop in Sanskrit and a voiceless stop in Greek.


Etymology

Origin of Grassman's law

First recorded in 1890–95