Difference between revisions of "Greek"

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! style="background:lawngreen" | <big>Greek ''<font face="Arial Unicode MS">&#917;&#955;&#955;&#951;&#957;&#953;&#954;&#940;</font>''</big>
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! style="background:lawngreen" | <big>Greek ''<font face="Arial Unicode MS">
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|[[Wikipedia:Indo-European Languages|Indo-European]]<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;[[Wikipedia:Greek|Greek]]
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[[Ammochostos]] <br>
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[[Athens and Midlands]] <br>
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[[Bedistan]] <br>
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[[Hipolis]] <br>
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[[Huo Xing]] <br>
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[[Lycia City]] <br>
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[[Meekinos]] <br>
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[[Nevareion]] <br />
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[[Nikolaos The Great]]<br>
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[[Nouvelle Macedoine]]<br>
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[[Pacitalia]] <br>
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[[Pantocratoria]] <br>
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[[The Resurgent Dream]] ([[Bilbtoria]]) <br>
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[[The Resplendent Dawn]] <br>
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[[The Stoic]] <br>
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[[Tiago Silva]] <br>
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*[[Wikipedia:Cyprus|RL Cyprus]] <br />
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*[[Wikipedia:Greece|RL Greece]] <br />
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The Greek [[language]] (<font face="Arial Unicode MS">&#917;&#955;&#955;&#951;&#957;&#953;&#954;&#940;</font> /Elini'k{/) is an [[Wikipedia:Indo-European|Indo-European]] language which has existed from around the 14th century BC in the Cretan inscriptions called Linear B. Mycenaean Greek of this period is distinguished from later Classical or Ancient Greek of the 8th century BC and after, when texts came to be written in the [[Wikipedia:Greek alphabet|Greek alphabet]].
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[[Wikipedia:Modern Greek|Modern Greek]] is a living tongue and one of the richest surviving languages today, with more than 600,000 words. Some scholars have overly stressed similarity to [[Wikipedia:millennia|millennia]]-old Greek languages. Its interintelligibility with ancient Greek is a matter of debate. It is claimed that a "reasonably well educated" speaker of the modern tongue can read the ancient dialects, but it is not made plain how much of that education consists of exposure to [[Wikipedia:vocabulary|vocabulary]] and [[Wikipedia:grammar|grammar]] obsolete in normal communication.  Greek from the Hellenistic and Byzantine times is markedly closer to Modern Greek.
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A large number of words and expressions have remained unchanged through the centuries, and have found their way into a number of other languages, including [[Latin]], [[Italian]], [[German]], [[French]], and [[English]]. Typical examples of such words include mostly terminology names, like astronomy, democracy, philosophy, thespian, anthropology etc.
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== Pantocratorian Greek / Παντοκράτορια Ελληνικά ==
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The Greek spoken in [[Pantocratoria]] branched off and evolved from Byzantine Greek at the same time as Modern Greek, and although the two are similar (and although Modern Greek and Pantocratorian Greek speakers shouldn't find it too difficult to communicate), Pantocratorian Greek is somewhat more archaic in nature. It doesn't incorporate so-called "loan words" from [[Italian]] or [[Turkish]], and Pantocratorian Greek grammar is marginally closer to Attic Greek than is Modern Greek's grammar. Pantocratorian Greek speakers share the pronounciation for which Byzantine Greek scholars were so heavily criticised by Western scholars of Classical Greek. The derisive, somewhat hyperbolic remarks of scholars like Roger Ascham (16th century) made about Byzantine pronounciation hold true for Pantocratorian pronounciation: "all sounds in Greek are now exactly the same, reduced, that is to say, to a like thin and slender character, and subjected to the authority of a single letter, the ''iota''; so that all one can hear is a feeble piping like that of sparrows, or an unpleasant hissing like that of snakes." Pantocratorian Greek speakers tend to pronounce many vowel sounds which were distinct in the classical language in a similar fashion: ι, η, υ, ει, οι, and υι all tend to be pronounced as "ι".
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{{Languages}}
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[[Category:Languages]]
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Revision as of 16:21, 11 April 2007

This article deals with Greek as it relates to NationStates. For more general information, see the Wikipedia article on this subject.

Greek