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Modern Greek (Template:Langx, Template:Translit {{#invoke:IPA|main}} or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, Template:Translit), generally referred to by speakers simply as Greek ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, Template:Translit), refers collectively to the dialects of the Greek language spoken in the modern era, including the official standardized form of the language sometimes referred to as Standard Modern Greek. The end of the Medieval Greek period and the beginning of Modern Greek is often symbolically assigned to the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453, even though that date marks no clear linguistic boundary and many characteristic features of the modern language arose centuries earlier, having begun around the fourth century AD.

During most of the Modern Greek period, the language existed in a situation of diglossia, with regional spoken dialects existing side by side with learned, more archaic written forms, as with the vernacular and learned varieties (Dimotiki and Katharevousa) that co-existed in Greece throughout much of the 19th and 20th centuries.

VarietiesEdit

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Varieties of Modern Greek include Demotic, Katharevousa, Pontic, Cappadocian, Mariupolitan, Southern Italian, Yevanic, Tsakonian and Greco-Australian.

DemoticEdit

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Strictly speaking, Demotic or Dimotiki ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), refers to all popular varieties of Modern Greek that followed a common evolutionary path from Koine and have retained a high degree of mutual intelligibility to the present. As shown in Ptochoprodromic and Acritic poems, Demotic Greek was the vernacular already before the 11th century and called the "Roman" language of the Byzantine Greeks, notably in peninsular Greece, the Greek islands, coastal Asia Minor, Constantinople, and Cyprus.

File:Modern Greek dialects en.svg
The distribution of major modern Greek dialect areas.<ref>Based on: Brian Newton: The Generative Interpretation of Dialect. A Study of Modern Greek Phonology, Cambridge 1972, Template:ISBN</ref>

Today, a standardized variety of Demotic Greek is the official language of Greece and Cyprus, and is referred to as "Standard Modern Greek", or less strictly simply as "Greek", "Modern Greek", or "Demotic".

Demotic Greek comprises various regional varieties with minor linguistic differences, mainly in phonology and vocabulary. Due to the high degree of mutual intelligibility of these varieties, Greek linguists refer to them as "idioms" of a wider "Demotic dialect", known as "Koine Modern Greek" ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}} - 'common Neo-Hellenic'). Most English-speaking linguists however refer to them as "dialects", emphasizing degrees of variation only when necessary. Demotic Greek varieties are divided into two main groups, Northern and Southern.

The main distinguishing feature common to Northern variants is a set of standard phonological shifts in unaccented vowel phonemes: {{#invoke:IPA|main}} becomes {{#invoke:IPA|main}}, {{#invoke:IPA|main}} becomes {{#invoke:IPA|main}}, and {{#invoke:IPA|main}} and {{#invoke:IPA|main}} are dropped. The dropped vowels' existence is implicit, and may affect surrounding phonemes: for example, a dropped {{#invoke:IPA|main}} palatalizes preceding consonants, just like an {{#invoke:IPA|main}} that is pronounced. Southern variants do not exhibit these phonological shifts.

Examples of Northern dialects are Rumelian (Constantinople), Epirote, Macedonian,<ref name=GreekSyntax>Template:Cite book</ref> Thessalian, Thracian, Northern Euboean, Sporades, Samos, Smyrna, and Sarakatsanika. The Southern category is divided into groups that include:Template:Citation needed

  1. Old Athenian-Maniot: Megara, Aegina, Athens, Cyme (Old Athenian) and Mani Peninsula (Maniot)
  2. Ionian-Peloponnesian: Peloponnese (except Mani), Ionian Islands, Attica, Boeotia, and Southern Euboea
  3. Cretan-Cycladian: Cyclades, Crete, and several enclaves in Syria and LebanonTemplate:Citation needed
  4. Southeastern: Chios, Ikaria, Dodecanese, and Cyprus.

Demotic Greek has officially been taught in monotonic Greek script since 1982.

KatharevousaEdit

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Katharevousa ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) is a sociolect promoted in the 19th century at the foundation of the modern Greek state, as a compromise between Classical Greek and modern Demotic. It was the official language of modern Greece until 1976.

Katharevousa is written in polytonic Greek script. Also, while Demotic Greek contains loanwords from Turkish, Italian, Latin, and other languages, these have for the most part been purged from Katharevousa. See also the Greek language question.

PonticEdit

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Anatolian Greek dialects until 1923. Demotic in yellow. Pontic in orange. Cappadocian Greek in green, with green dots indicating individual Cappadocian Greek villages in 1910.<ref name="Dawkins, R.M 1916" />

Pontic ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) was originally spoken along the mountainous Black Sea coast of Turkey, the so-called Pontus region, until most of its speakers were killed or displaced to modern Greece during the Pontic genocide (1919–1921), followed later by the population exchange between Greece and Turkey in 1923. (Small numbers of Muslim speakers of Pontic Greek escaped these events and still reside in the Pontic villages of Turkey.) It derives from Hellenistic and Medieval Koine and preserves characteristics of Ionic due to ancient colonizations of the region. Pontic evolved as a separate dialect from Demotic Greek as a result of the region's isolation from the Greek mainstream after the Fourth Crusade fragmented the Byzantine Empire into separate kingdoms (see Empire of Trebizond).

CappadocianEdit

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Cappadocian ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) is a Greek dialect of central Turkey of the same fate as Pontic; its speakers settled in mainland Greece after the Greek genocide (1919–1921) and the later Population exchange between Greece and Turkey in 1923. Cappadocian Greek diverged from the other Byzantine Greek dialects earlier, beginning with the Turkish conquests of central Asia Minor in the 11th and 12th centuries, and so developed several radical features, such as the loss of the gender for nouns.<ref name="Dawkins, R.M 1916">Template:Cite book</ref> Having been isolated from the crusader conquests (Fourth Crusade) and the later Venetian influence of the Greek coast, it retained the Ancient Greek terms for many words that were replaced with Romance ones in Demotic Greek.<ref name="Dawkins, R.M 1916" /> The poet Rumi, whose name means "Roman", referring to his residence amongst the "Roman" Greek speakers of Cappadocia, wrote a few poems in Cappadocian Greek, one of the earliest attestations of the dialect.<ref>Δέδες, Δ. 1993. Ποιήματα του Μαυλανά Ρουμή. Τα Ιστορικά 10.18–19: 3–22. (in Greek)</ref><ref>Meyer, G. 1895. Die griechischen Verse in Rabâbnâma. Byzantinische Zeitschrift 4: 401–411. (in German)</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>The Greek Poetry of Jalaluddin Rumi</ref>

MariupolitanEdit

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Ruméika ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) or Mariupolitan Greek is a dialect spoken in about 17 villages around the northern coast of the Sea of Azov in southern Ukraine and Russia. Mariupolitan Greek is closely related to Pontic Greek and evolved from the dialect of Greek spoken in Crimea, which was a part of the Byzantine Empire and then the Pontic Empire of Trebizond, until that latter state fell to the Ottomans in 1461.<ref>Dawkins, Richard M. "The Pontic dialect of Modern Greek in Asia Minor and Russia". Transactions of the Philological Society 36.1 (1937): 15–52.</ref> Thereafter, the Crimean Greek state continued to exist as the independent Greek Principality of Theodoro. The Greek-speaking inhabitants of Crimea were deported by Catherine the Great to resettle in the new city of Mariupol after the Russo-Turkish War (1768–74) to escape the then Muslim-dominated Crimea.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Mariupolitan's main features have certain similarities with both Pontic (e.g. the lack of synizesis of -ía, éa) and the northern varieties of the core dialects (e.g. the northern vocalism).<ref>Kontosopoulos (2008), 109</ref>

Southern ItalianEdit

File:GrikoSpeakingCommunitiesTodayV4.png
Areas in Southern Italy where the Griko and Calabrian dialects are spoken

Southern Italian or Italiot ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) comprises both Calabrian and Griko varieties, spoken by around 15 villages in the regions of Calabria and Apulia. The Southern Italian dialect is the last living trace of Hellenic elements in Southern Italy that once formed Magna Graecia. Its origins can be traced to the Dorian Greek settlers who colonised the area from Sparta and Corinth in 700 BC.

It has received significant Koine Greek influence through Byzantine Greek colonisers who re-introduced Greek language to the region, starting with Justinian's conquest of Italy in late antiquity and continuing through the Middle Ages. Griko and Demotic are mutually intelligible to some extent, but the former shares some common characteristics with Tsakonian.

YevanicEdit

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Yevanic ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) is an almost extinct language of Romaniote Jews. The language was already in decline for centuries until most of its speakers were killed in the Holocaust. Afterward, the language was mostly kept by remaining Romaniote emigrants to Israel, where it was displaced by modern Hebrew.

TsakonianEdit

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Tsakonian ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) is spoken in its full form today only in a small number of villages around the town of Leonidio in the region of Arcadia in the Southern Peloponnese, and partially spoken further afield in the area. Tsakonian evolved directly from Laconian (ancient Spartan) and therefore descends from Doric Greek.

It has limited input from Hellenistic Koine and is significantly different from and not mutually intelligible with other Greek varieties (such as Demotic Greek and Pontic Greek). Some linguists consider it a separate language because of this.

Greco-AustralianEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Greco-Australian is an Australian dialect of Greek that is spoken by the Greek diaspora of Australia, including Greek immigrants living in Australia and Australians of Greek descent.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Phonology and orthographyEdit

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Spoken Modern Greek

A series of radical sound changes starting in Koine Greek has led to a phonological system in Modern Greek that is significantly different from that of Ancient Greek. Instead of the complex vowel system of Ancient Greek, with its four vowel-height levels, length distinction, and multiple diphthongs, Modern Greek has a simple system of five vowels. This came about through a series of mergers, especially towards {{#invoke:IPA|main}} (iotacism).

Modern Greek consonants are plain (voiceless unaspirated) stops, voiced stops, or voiced and unvoiced fricatives. Modern Greek has not preserved length in vowels or consonants.

Template:Greek Alphabet

Modern Greek is written in the Greek alphabet, which has 24 letters, each with a capital and lowercase (small) form. The letter sigma additionally has a special final form. There are two diacritical symbols, the acute accent which indicates stress and the diaeresis marking a vowel letter as not being part of a digraph. Greek has a mixed historical and phonemic orthography, where historical spellings are used if their pronunciation matches modern usage. The correspondence between consonant phonemes and graphemes is largely unique, but several of the vowels can be spelt in multiple ways.<ref>cf. Iotacism</ref> Thus reading is easy but spelling is difficult.<ref>G. Th. Pavlidis and V. Giannouli, "Spelling Errors Accurately Differentiate USA-Speakers from Greek Dyslexics: Ιmplications for Causality and Treatment" in R.M. Joshi et al. (eds) Literacy Acquisition: The Role of Phonology, Morphology and Orthography. Washington, 2003. Template:ISBN</ref>

A number of diacritical signs were used until 1982, when they were officially dropped from Greek spelling as no longer corresponding to the modern pronunciation of the language. Monotonic orthography is today used in official usage, in schools and for most purposes of everyday writing in Greece. Polytonic orthography, besides being used for older varieties of Greek, is still used in book printing, especially for academic and belletristic purposes, and in everyday use by some conservative writers and elderly people. The Greek Orthodox Church continues to use polytonic and the late Christodoulos of Athens<ref name="Christodoulos">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the Holy Synod of the Church of Greece<ref name="RelationsProject">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> have requested the reintroduction of polytonic as the official script.

The Greek vowel letters and digraphs with their pronunciations are: Template:Angle bracket Template:IPAslink, Template:Angle bracket Template:IPAslink, Template:Angle bracket Template:IPAslink, Template:Angle bracket Template:IPAslink, and Template:Angle bracket Template:IPAslink. The digraphs Template:Angle bracket, Template:Angle bracket and Template:Angle bracket are pronounced {{#invoke:IPA|main}}, {{#invoke:IPA|main}}, and {{#invoke:IPA|main}} respectively before vowels and voiced consonants, and {{#invoke:IPA|main}}, {{#invoke:IPA|main}} and {{#invoke:IPA|main}} respectively before voiceless consonants.

The Greek letters Template:Angle bracket, Template:Angle bracket, Template:Angle bracket, and Template:Angle bracket are pronounced Template:IPAslink, Template:IPAslink, Template:IPAslink, and Template:IPAslink respectively. The letters Template:Angle bracket and Template:Angle bracket are pronounced Template:IPAslink and Template:IPAslink, respectively. All those letters represent fricatives in Modern Greek, but they were used for occlusives with the same (or with a similar) articulation point in Ancient Greek. Before mid or close front vowels (Template:IPAslink and Template:IPAslink), Template:Angle bracket and Template:Angle bracket are fronted, becoming Template:IPAblink and Template:IPAblink, respectively, which, in some dialects, notably those of Crete and Mani, are further fronted to Template:IPAblink or Template:IPAblink and Template:IPAblink or Template:IPAblink, respectively. Μoreover, before mid or close back vowels (Template:IPAslink and Template:IPAslink), Template:Angle bracket tends to be pronounced further back than a prototypical velar, between a velar Template:IPAblink and an uvular Template:IPAblink (transcribed {{#invoke:IPA|main}}). The letter Template:Angle bracket stands for the sequence {{#invoke:IPA|main}} and Template:Angle bracket for {{#invoke:IPA|main}}.

The digraphs Template:Angle bracket and Template:Angle bracket are generally pronounced Template:IPAblink, but are fronted to Template:IPAblink before front vowels (Template:IPAslink and Template:IPAslink) and tend to be pronounced {{#invoke:IPA|main}} before the back vowels (Template:IPAslink and Template:IPAslink). When these digraphs are preceded by a vowel, they are pronounced {{#invoke:IPA|main}} and {{#invoke:IPA|main}} before front vowels (Template:IPAslink and Template:IPAslink) and {{#invoke:IPA|main}} before the back (Template:IPAslink and Template:IPAslink). The digraph Template:Angle bracket may be pronounced {{#invoke:IPA|main}} in some words ({{#invoke:IPA|main}} before front vowels and {{#invoke:IPA|main}} before back ones). The pronunciation {{#invoke:IPA|main}} for the digraph Template:Angle bracket is extremely rare, but could be heard in literary and scholarly words or when reading ancient texts (by a few readers); normally it retains its "original" pronunciation {{#invoke:IPA|main}} only in the trigraph Template:Angle bracket, where Template:Angle bracket prevents the sonorization of Template:Angle bracket by Template:Angle bracket (hence {{#invoke:IPA|main}}).

Syntax and morphologyEdit

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File:Plaque de la rue Psaron (Réthymnon).JPG
Street sign in Rethymno in honor of Psara island: Psaron (in genitive) Street, historic island of the 1821 Revolution

Modern Greek is largely a synthetic language. Modern Greek and Albanian are the only two modern Indo-European languages that retain a synthetic passive (the North Germanic passive is a recent innovation based on a grammaticalized reflexive pronoun).

Differences from Classical GreekEdit

Modern Greek has changed from Classical Greek in morphology and syntax, losing some features and gaining others.

Features lost:

Features gained:

  • gerund
  • modal particle {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (a contraction of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} → {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} → {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} → {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), which marks future tense and conditional mood
  • auxiliary verb forms for certain verb forms (in particular the perfect tense)
  • aspectual distinction in future tense between imperfective (present) and perfective (aorist)

Modern Greek has developed a simpler system of grammatical prefixes marking tense and aspect of a verb, such as augmentation and reduplication, and has lost some patterns of noun declension and some distinct forms in the declensions.

Most of these features are shared with other languages spoken in the Balkan peninsula (see Balkan sprachbund), although Greek does not show all typical Balkan areal features, such as the postposed article.

Because of the influence of Katharevousa, however, Demotic is not commonly used in its purest form. Archaisms are still widely used, especially in writing and in more formal speech, as well as in some everyday expressions, such as the dative {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('okay', literally 'in order') or the third person imperative {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}! ('long live!').

Sample textEdit

The following is a sample text in Modern Greek of Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (by the United Nations):

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ReferencesEdit

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Further readingEdit

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External linksEdit

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Courses

Dictionaries and glossaries

Grammar

Institutes

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