In Indo-European studies, the term s-mobile designates the phenomenon where a Proto-Indo-European root appears to begin with an which is sometimes but not always present. It is therefore represented in the reflex of the root in some attested derivatives but not others. The fact that there is no consistency about which language groups retain the s-mobile in individual cases is good evidence that it is an original Indo-European phenomenon, and not an element added or lost in the later history of any specific language.
This "movable" prefix appears at the beginning of some Indo-European roots, but is absent from other occurrences of the same root. For example, the stem 'large domestic animal, cattle', perhaps 'aurochs', gives Latin and Old English (Modern English steer), both meaning 'bull'. Both variants existed side by side in PIE, with Germanic preserving the forms as and respectively, but Italic, Celtic, Slavic and others all having words for 'bull' which reflect the root without the . Compare also: Gothic , German , Avestan (cattle); but Old Norse , Greek , Latin , Old Church Slavonic (< Proto-Slavic ), Lithuanian , Welsh , Old Irish , Oscan , and Albanian .
In other cases, it is Germanic that preserves only the form without the s mobile. The Proto-Indo-European root , 'to cover', has descendants English thatch (from Old English ), German 'to cover', Latin 'I cover', but Greek and Russian .
Sometimes subsequent developments can treat the forms with and without the s-mobile quite differently. For example, by Grimm's law PIE becomes Proto-Germanic , but the combination is unaffected by this. Thus the root , perhaps meaning 'to scatter', has two apparently quite dissimilar derivatives in English: sprinkle (from the nasalized form ), and freckle (from ).
S-mobile is always followed by another consonant. Typical combinations are with voiceless stops: , , ; with liquids and nasals: , , ; and rarely, .
One theory of the origin of the s-mobile is that it was influenced by a suffix to the preceding word; many inflectional suffixes in PIE are reconstructed as having ended in , including the nominative singular and accusative plural of many nouns. The s-mobile can therefore be seen as an interference between the words, a kind of sandhi or rebracketing development. So for example, while an alternation between and (both meaning 'they saw') might be difficult to imagine, an alternation between and ('they saw the wolves') is plausible. The two variants would still be pronounced differently, as the double -ss- is distinct from a single -s- (compare English this pot and this spot), but the alternation can now be understood as a simple process of gemination (doubling) or degemination.
This can be understood in two ways.
A number of roots beginning in , , look as if they had an s-mobile but the evidence is inconclusive, since several languages (Latin, Greek, Albanian) lost initial s- before sonorants (l, m, n) by regular sound change. Examples include: