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In historical linguistics, the asno law is a sound law in Proto-Indo-European where word-medial consonant clusters containing underlying *-Cmn- tend to lose one of the nasal consonants *m or *n. This sound change was first documented by Johannes Schmidt in 1895 and is named for the Avestan reflex 𐬀𐬯𐬥𐬋 asnō. The asno law, along with Stang's law, is one of Proto-Indo-European's manifestations of a phonotactic restriction against multiple adjacent sonorants in the coda of a syllable.
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