Classical Greek
Greek, like any language, is ever-changing, and is spread across many dialects. The notes in this article relate specifically to the Attic Greek dialect of the 400s-300s BCE, typical of scholars such as Plato, Lysias, Xenophon, Demosthenes, and Thucydides.
The Attic Alphabet[edit | edit source]
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Suprasegmental features in phonetics refer to aspects of speech that extend over more than one sound segment (i.e., consonants and vowels). These include tone, stress, and syllable breaks, which are not properties of individual phonetic segments but of larger units such as syllables, words, or sentences. In Ancient Greek, as in many languages, these features played a significant role in distinguishing word meaning and grammatical forms.
Punctuation and Capitalization[edit | edit source]
Greek utilizes the same comma and period symbols as modern English; there is no distinction between the colon and semi-colon, which is represented by a dot floating above the base line. This symbol is called the άνω τελεία (ánō teleía; roughly 'upper period') represented as: ·
Πήγα στο κατάστημα· δεν αγόρασα τίποτα.
I went to the store; but I didn't buy anything.
Relatedly, the word for comma is κόμμα (kómma), and the word for period/full stop is τελεία (teleía). The question mark in Greek is represented by what we call the semi-colon in English; ερωτηματικό (erotimatikó, question mark).
As in English, proper nouns are capitalized, as are the first words of paragraphs and quotations, but the first words of sentences are not. Generally, Greeks did not use quotation-marks.
Ancient Greek used a pitch accent system, where the accent of a word was determined by the pitch or tone - high, low, rising / falling - rather than by stress (loudness or length) as in English. There were three main accents in Ancient Greek:
- Acute (ὀξεῖα): indicated a rise in pitch on the accented syllable.
- Grave (βαρεῖα): used only in specific syntactical contexts, indicating a lower pitch.
- Circumflex (περισπωμένη): indicated a rise and then a fall in pitch within the same syllable.
The placement of the accent was subject to various rules: no matter how many syllables a word may have, the accent can appear only over one of the last three syllables, for example. The final syllable was called the ultima, abbreviated 'u'. The penultimate syllable is called the penult, abbreviated 'p'. The third-from-last syllable is called the antepenult, abbreviated 'a'.
- Grave accents:
- can appear only over the ultima.
- can appear over short vowels, long vowels, or diphthongs.
- must replace an acute accent over the ultima when another word follows without a pause.
- Circumflex accents:
- can appear only over the ultima and the penult.
- can appear only over long vowels or diphthongs.
- must appear over the penult when it is accented and contains a long vowel or diphthong, and the ultima contains a short vowel.
- cannot appear over the penult when the ultimate contains a long vowel or diphthong.