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		<title>Greek Alphabet: Introduction</title>
		<link>http://hellenicaproject.wordpress.com/2008/06/23/greek-alphabet-introduction/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Jun 2008 13:05:36 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Spelling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alphabet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[consonants]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vowels]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Greek alphabet should look suspiciously familiar to any English speaker. Originally borrowed from the Phoenicians, two-and-a-half thousand years of use and the spelling needs of the western European languages transformed the Greek alphabet into the Greco-Roman one (note the Greco-) we use today. 
Plato would take a big red pen to most modern editions [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=hellenicaproject.wordpress.com&blog=4049364&post=3&subd=hellenicaproject&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>The Greek alphabet should look suspiciously familiar to any English speaker. Originally borrowed from the Phoenicians, two-and-a-half thousand years of use and the spelling needs of the western European languages transformed the Greek alphabet into the Greco-Roman one (note the Greco-) we use today. </p>
<p>Plato would take a big red pen to most modern editions of his <i>Republic</i>. Even the untranslated versions: the spelling used in most latter-day representations of ancient Greek is a slightly more modern version of the Greek alphabet, with a full complement of lowercase letters and accents which would have been unfamiliar to Plato, and some letters which were adopted by the Athenians in Plato&#8217;s lifetime.</p>
<p>Greek has seventeen consonants and seven vowels: twenty-four letters total. <span id="more-3"></span>The order (and the shapes and sounds of the letters, to be honest: this is not the alphabet you&#8217;re used to. Unless you&#8217;re an ancient Greek, in which case, call me) is different from that of our alphabet:</p>
<p>Uppercase: <span class="greek">ΑΒΓΔΕΖΗΘΙΚΛΜΝΞΟΠΡΣΤΥΦΧΨΩ</span><br />
Lowercase: <span class="greek">αβγδεζηθικλμνξοπρστυφχψω</span></p>
<h1>Consonants</h1>
<p>Ββ Γγ Δδ Ζζ Θθ Κκ Λλ Μμ Νν Ξξ Ππ Ρρ Σσς Ττ Φφ Χχ Ψψ</p>
<p>β, δ and γ are like the English b, d and g, respectively, but γ is always a <i>hard</i> g sound, as in &#8220;get&#8221;.</p>
<p>π, τ and κ are like English p, t and k, but do not have the extra puff of air (<i>aspiration</i>) that accompanies the sounds at the start of English words. If you&#8217;re not clear about this, hold a piece of loosely in front of your mouth and say &#8220;pop, tat, cook&#8221; and pay attention to how the paper flutters at the first consonant in each word, but not the second.</p>
<p>φ, θ and χ are English p, t and k <i>with</i> aspiration. People unaccustomed to distinguishing between those sounds (like most English speakers) pronounce these letters like <u>ph</u>iloso<u>ph</u>, <u>th</u>eatre and lo<u>ch</u>; inaccurate but much easier to say. Also, the people who can rightly correct you on your pronunciation are all dead. Go nuts.</p>
<p>λ, μ, ν and ρ: l, m, n and r. </p>
<p>σ is an English s. That&#8217;s not enough to get it its own paragraph, but this is: at the end of a word, just to trip you up, a lowercase σ is written ς: Σωκρατης (or Socrates, as we like to call him). In uppercase letters there&#8217;s only the one version: ΣΩΚΡΑΤΗΣ.</p>
<p>ξ and ψ are ks (like English x) and ps respectively.</p>
<p>ζ is some combination of s and d: most people say sd, some people say ds.</p>
<p><b>Watchlist</b>: ρ = r, not p. χ = kh, not x. ν = n, not v.</p>
<h1>Vowels</h1>
<p>Αα Εε Ηη Ιι Οο Υυ Ωω</p>
<p>Slightly oddly, Greek has only five vowel sounds and seven vowel letters.</p>
<p>A sound: like in f<u>a</u>ther. Written α for both short and long variants.</p>
<p>E sound: like in b<u>e</u>t. Written ε for the short variant and η for the long.</p>
<p>I sound: like in mach<u>i</u>ne. Written ι for both short and long variants.</p>
<p>O sound: like in h<u>o</u>t. Written ο for the short variant and ω for the long.</p>
<p>U sound: like in the French word <i>l<u>u</u>ne</i> or German <i><u>&uuml;</u>ber</i>. Written υ for both short and long variants.</p>
<p><b>Watchlist</b>: η and ω are vowels, not consonants like their English impersonators h and w.</p>
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