One very common example of a surface filter is
final-obstruent devoicing in which a
voiced obstruent at the end of a word is automatically converted to their unvoiced counterpart. If that were a regular
sound change, the devoicing would occur only at a particular point in time, and any new words that entered the language later might end in voiced obstruents. However, new words are automatically "passed through the filter" like earlier words, and their final obstruents are devoiced automatically. That happens even if there is
apocope of final vowels, with non-final obstruents becoming final. A historical example in Dutch occurs in many verbs, such as
blazen ("to blow"). The original
Middle Dutch first-person singular present form was
blaze, but when the final
-e was lost, the form did not become *
blaaz (the doubled vowel is only a spelling convention), but the
-z was automatically devoiced to create the modern form,
blaas. Two other examples of surface filters in the history of the
Germanic languages were
Sievers' law and the
Germanic spirant law. Sievers' law caused a restriction on the distribution between
-j- and
-ij-. The former appeared after a consonant following a short vowel, and the latter otherwise occurred. The process was automatic and affected even new words and loanwords: the
Latin word
puteus ("pit, well"), for example, was borrowed into Germanic as the two-syllable *
putjaz. The more-faithful rendering *
putijaz was not permitted since the short vowel
u was followed by a single consonant
t. The Germanic spirant law affected combinations of an obstruent that was followed by
-t-. Such obstruents were automatically converted into fricatives, with dentals becoming
-s-, and devoiced. For example, the Latin word
scriptum ("writing") was borrowed into Germanic as *
skriftiz. The forbidden combination
-pt- was replaced by
-ft-. ==Application==