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Ancient Macedonian language

Ancient Macedonian, the language of the ancient Macedonians, either a dialect of Ancient Greek, or a separate Hellenic language, was spoken in the kingdom of Macedonia during the 1st millennium BC and belongs to the Indo-European language family. It gradually fell out of use during the 4th century BC, marginalized by the use of Attic Greek by the Macedonian aristocracy, the Ancient Greek dialect that became the basis of Koine Greek, the lingua franca of the Hellenistic period.[4] It became extinct during either the Hellenistic or Roman imperial period, and was entirely replaced by Koine Greek.[5]

Macedonian
RegionMacedon
Era1st millennium BC[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3xmk
xmk
GlottologNone

While the bulk of surviving public and private inscriptions found in ancient Macedonia were written in Attic Greek (and later in Koine Greek),[6][7] fragmentary documentation of a vernacular local variety comes from onomastic evidence, ancient glossaries and recent epigraphic discoveries in the Greek region of Macedonia, such as the Pella curse tablet.[8][9][10] This local variety is usually classified by scholars as a dialect of Northwest Doric Greek, and occasionally as an Aeolic Greek dialect or a distinct sister language of Greek.

Classification

Due to the fragmentary attestation of this dialect or language, various interpretations are possible.[11][12] Suggested classifications of ancient Macedonian include:[13][14]

  • A sister language of Greek, according to a scheme in which Macedonian and Greek are the two branches of a Greco-Macedonian subgroup (sometimes called "Hellenic");[11] suggested by Georgiev (1966),[25] Joseph (2001)[11] and Hamp (2013).[26]

Properties

Because of the fragmentary sources of Ancient Macedonian, only a little is understood about the special features of the language. A notable sound-law is that the Proto-Indo-European voiced aspirates (/bʰ, dʰ, gʰ/) sometimes appear as voiced stops /b, d, g/, (written β, δ, γ), whereas they were generally unvoiced as /pʰ, tʰ, kʰ/ (φ, θ, χ) elsewhere in Ancient Greek.[27]

  • Macedonian δάνος dánοs ('death', from PIE *dhenh2- 'to leave'), compared to Attic θάνατος thánatos
  • Macedonian ἀβροῦτες abroûtes or ἀβροῦϝες abroûwes, compared to Attic ὀφρῦς ophrûs for 'eyebrows'
  • Macedonian Βερενίκη Bereníkē, compared to Attic Φερενίκη Phereníkē, 'bearing victory' (Personal name)
  • Macedonian ἄδραια adraia ('bright weather'), compared to Attic αἰθρία aithría, from PIE *h2aidh-
  • Macedonian βάσκιοι báskioi ('fasces'), compared to Attic φάσκωλος pháskōlos 'leather sack', from PIE *bhasko
  • According to Herodotus 7.73 (c. 440 BC), the Macedonians claimed that the Phryges were called Bryges before they migrated from Thrace to Anatolia (around 8th–7th century BC).
  • According to Plutarch, Moralia[28] Macedonians use 'b' instead of 'ph', while Delphians use 'b' in the place of 'p'.
  • Macedonian μάγειρος mágeiros ('butcher') was a loan from Doric into Attic. Vittore Pisani has suggested an ultimately Macedonian origin for the word, which could then be cognate to μάχαιρα mákhaira ('knife', < PIE *magh-, 'to fight')[29]

If γοτάν gotán ('pig') is related to *gwou ('cattle'), this would indicate that the labiovelars were either intact, or merged with the velars, unlike the usual Greek treatment (Attic βοῦς boûs). Such deviations, however, are not unknown in Greek dialects; compare Laconian Doric (the dialect of Sparta) γλεπ- glep- for common Greek βλεπ- blep-, as well as Doric γλάχων gláchōn and Ionic γλήχων glēchōn for common Greek βλήχων blēchōn.[30]

A number of examples suggest that voiced velar stops were devoiced, especially word-initially: κάναδοι kánadoi, 'jaws' (< PIE *genu-); κόμβους kómbous, 'molars' (< PIE *gombh-); within words: ἀρκόν arkón (Attic ἀργός argós); the Macedonian toponym Akesamenai, from the Pierian name Akesamenos (if Akesa- is cognate to Greek agassomai, agamai, "to astonish"; cf. the Thracian name Agassamenos).

In Aristophanes' The Birds, the form κεβλήπυρις keblēpyris ('red head', the name of a bird, perhaps the goldfinch or redpoll) is found,[31] showing a Macedonian-style voiced stop in place of a standard Greek unvoiced aspirate: κεβ(α)λή keb(a)lē versus κεφαλή kephalē ('head'). Emilio Crespo wrote that "the voicing of voiceless stops and the development of aspirates into voiced fricatives turns out to be the outcome of an internal development of Macedonian as a dialect of Greek" without excluding "the presence of interference from other languages or of any linguistic substrate or adstrate", as also argued by M. Hatzopoulos.[32]

A number of the Macedonian words, particularly in Hesychius of Alexandria' lexicon, are disputed (i.e., some do not consider them actual Macedonian words) and some may have been corrupted in the transmission. Thus abroutes, may be read as abrouwes (αβρουϝες), with tau (Τ) replacing a digamma.[33] If so, this word would perhaps be encompassable within a Greek dialect; however, others (e.g. A. Meillet) see the dental as authentic and think that this specific word would perhaps belong to an Indo-European language different from Greek.[citation needed]

A. Panayotou summarizes some features generally identified through ancient texts and epigraphy:[34]

Phonology

  • Occasional development of voiced aspirates (*bh, *dh, *gh) into voiced stops (b, d, g) (e.g. Βερενίκα, Attic Φερενίκη)
  • Retention of */a:/ (e.g. Μαχάτας), also present in Epirotic[35]
  • [a:] as a result of contraction between [a:] and [ɔ:]
  • Apocope of short vowels in prepositions in synthesis (παρκαττίθεμαι, Attic παρακατατίθεμαι)
  • Syncope (hyphairesis) and diphthongization are used to avoid hiatus (e.g. Θετίμα, Attic Θεοτίμη; compare with Epirotic Λαγέτα, Doric Λαογἐτα).[35]
  • Occasional retention of the pronunciation [u] of /u(:)/ in local cult epithets or nicknames (Κουναγίδας = Κυναγίδας)
  • Raising of /ɔ:/ to /u:/ in proximity to nasal (e.g. Κάνουν, Attic Κανών)
  • Simplification of the sequence /ign/ to /i:n/ (γίνομαι, Attic γίγνομαι)
  • Loss of aspiration of the consonant cluster /sth/ (> /st/) (γενέσται, Attic γενέσθαι)

Morphology

Ancient Macedonian morphology is shared with ancient Epirus, including some of the oldest inscriptions from Dodona.[36] The morphology of the first declension nouns with an -ας ending is also shared with Thessalian (e.g. Epitaph for Pyrrhiadas, Kierion[37]).

  • First-declension masculine and feminine in -ας and -α respectively (e.g. Πεύκεστας, Λαομάγα)
  • First-declension masculine genitive singular in -α (e.g. Μαχάτα)
  • First-declension genitive plural in -ᾶν
  • First person personal pronoun dative singular ἐμίν
  • Temporal conjunction ὁπόκα
  • Possibly, a non-sigmatic nominative masculine singular in the first declension (ἱππότα, Attic ἱππότης)

Onomastics

Anthroponymy

M. Hatzopoulos and Johannes Engels summarize the Macedonian anthroponymy (that is names borne by people from Macedonia before the expansion beyond the Axios or people undoubtedly hailing from this area after the expansion) as follows:[38][39]

  • Epichoric (local) Greek names that either differ from the phonology of the introduced Attic or that remained almost confined to Macedonians throughout antiquity
  • Panhellenic (common) Greek names
  • Identifiable non-Greek (Thracian and Illyrian) names
  • Names without a clear Greek etymology that can't however be ascribed to any identifiable non-Greek linguistic group.

Common in the creation of ethnics is the use of -έστης, -εστός especially when derived from sigmatic nouns (ὄρος > Ὀρέστης but also Δῖον > Διασταί).[34]

Per Engels, the above material supports that Macedonian anthroponymy was predominantly Greek in character.[39]

Toponymy

The toponyms of Macedonia proper are generally Greek, though some of them show a particular phonology and a few others are non-Greek.

Calendar

The Macedonian calendar's origins go back to Greek prehistory. The names of the Macedonian months, just like most of the names of Greek months, are derived from feasts and related celebrations in honor of the Greek gods.[40] Most of them combine a Macedonian dialectal form with a clear Greek etymology (e.g Δῐός from Zeus; Περίτιος from Heracles Peritas (“Guardian”) ; Ξανδικός/Ξανθικός from Xanthos, “the blond” (probably a reference to Heracles); Άρτεμίσιος from Artemis etc.) with the possible exception of one, which is attested in other Greek calendars as well.[40] According to Martin P. Nilsson, the Macedonian calendar is formed like a regular Greek one and the names of the months attest the Greek nationality of the Macedonians.[40]

Epigraphy

Macedonian onomastics: the earliest epigraphical documents attesting substantial numbers of Macedonian proper names are the second Athenian alliance decree with Perdiccas II (~417–413 BC), the decree of Kalindoia (~335–300 BC) and seven curse tablets of the 4th century BC bearing mostly names.[41][42]

About 99% of the roughly 6,300 inscriptions discovered by archaeologists within the confines of ancient Macedonia were written in the Greek language, using the Greek alphabet.[44] The legends in all currently discovered coins also in Greek.[44] The Pella curse tablet, a text written in a distinct Doric Greek dialect, found in 1986 and dated to between mid to early 4th century BC, has been forwarded as an argument that the ancient Macedonian language was a dialect of North-Western Greek, part of the Doric dialect group.[45]

Hesychius' glossary

A body of idiomatic words has been assembled from ancient sources, mainly from coin inscriptions, and from the 5th century lexicon of Hesychius of Alexandria, amounting to about 150 words and 200 proper names, though the number of considered words sometimes differs from scholar to scholar. The majority of these words can be confidently assigned to Greek albeit some words would appear to reflect a dialectal form of Greek. There are, however, a number of words that are not easily identifiable as Greek and reveal, for example, voiced stops where Greek shows voiceless aspirates.[46]

⟨†⟩ marked words which have been corrupted.

  • ἄβαγνα abagna 'roses amaranta (unwithered)' (Attic ῥόδα rhoda, Aeolic βρόδα broda roses). (LSJ: amarantos unfading. Amaranth flower. (Aeolic ἄβα aba 'youthful prime' + ἁγνός hagnos 'pure, chaste, unsullied) or epithet aphagna from aphagnizo 'purify'.[47] If abagnon is the proper name for rhodon rose, then it is cognate to Persian باغ bāġ, 'garden', Gothic 𐌱𐌰𐌲𐌼𐍃 bagms 'tree' and Greek bakanon 'cabbage-seed'. Finally, a Phrygian borrowing is highly possible if we think of the famous Gardens of Midas, where roses grow of themselves (see Herodotus 8.138.2, Athenaeus 15.683)
  • ἀβαρκνᾷ abarknai κομᾷ † τὲ Μακεδόνες (komai? ἄβαρκνα abarkna hunger, famine).
  • ἀβαρύ abarú 'oregano' (Hes. ὀρίγανον origanon) (LSJ: βαρύ barú perfume used in incense, Attic βαρύ barú 'heavy') (LSJ: amarakon sweet Origanum Majorana) (Hes. for origanon ἀγριβρόξ agribrox, ἄβρομον abromon, ἄρτιφος artiphos, κεβλήνη keblênê)
  • ἀβλόη, ἀλογεῖ abloē, alogei Text Corrupted ἀβλόη σπένδε Μακεδόνες [ἀλογεῖ σπεῖσον Μακεδόνες] spendô)
  • ἀβροῦτες or ἀβροῦϜες abroûtes or abroûwes 'eyebrows' (Hes. Attic ὀφρῦς ophrûs acc. pl., ὀφρύες ophrúes nom., PIE *bʰru-) (Serbian obrve, Lithuanian bruvis, Persian ابرو abru) (Koine Greek ophrudia, Modern Greek φρύδια frydia)
  • ἀγκαλίς ankalis Attic 'weight, burden, load' Macedonian 'sickle' (Hes. Attic ἄχθος ákhthos, δρέπανον drépanon, LSJ Attic ἀγκαλίς ankalís 'bundle', or in pl. ἀγκάλαι ankálai 'arms' (body parts), ἄγκαλος ánkalos 'armful, bundle', ἀγκάλη ankálē 'the bent arm' or 'anything closely enfolding', as the arms of the sea, PIE *ank 'to bend') (ἀγκυλίς ankylis 'barb' Oppianus.C.1.155.)
  • ἄδδαι addai poles of a chariot or car, logs (Attic ῥυμοὶ rhumoi) (Aeolic usdoi, Attic ozoi, branches, twigs) PIE *H₂ó-sd-o- , branch
  • ἀδῆ adē 'clear sky' or 'the upper air' (Hes. οὐρανός ouranós 'sky', LSJ and Pokorny Attic αἰθήρ aithēr 'ether, the upper, purer air', hence 'clear sky, heaven')
  • ἄδισκον adiskon potion, cocktail (Attic kykeôn)
  • ἄδραια adraia 'fine weather, open sky' (Hes. Attic αἰθρία aithría, Epirotan ἀδρία, PIE *aidh-)
  • Ἀέροπες Aeropes tribe (wind-faced) (aero- +opsis(aerops opos, Boeotian name for the bird merops)
  • ἀκόντιον akontion spine or backbone, anything ridged like the backbone: ridge of a hill or mountain (Attic rhachis) (Attic akontion spear, javelin) (Aeolic akontion part of troops)
  • ἀκρέα akrea girl (Attic κόρη korê, Ionic kourê, Doric/Aeolic kora, Arcadian korwa, Laconian kyrsanis (Ἀκρέα, epithet of Aphrodite in Cyprus, instead of Akraia, of the heights). Epithet of a goddess from an archaic Corcyraic inscription (ορϝος hιαρος τας Ακριας).
  • ἀκρουνοί akrounoi 'boundary stones' nom. pl. (Hes. ὃροι hóroi, LSJ Attic ἄκρον ákron 'at the end or extremity', from ἀκή akē 'point, edge', PIE *ak 'summit, point' or 'sharp')
  • ἀλίη alíē 'boar or boarfish' (Attic kapros) (PIE *ol-/*el- "red, brown" (in animal and tree names)[48] (Homeric ellos fawn, Attic elaphos 'deer', alkê elk)
  • ἄλιζα aliza (also alixa) 'White Poplar' (Attic λεύκη leúkē, Epirotan ἄλυζα, Thessalian alphinia, LSJ: ἄλυζα, aluza globularia alypum) (Pokorny Attic ἐλάτη elátē 'fir, spruce', PIE *ol-, *el-, P.Gmc. and Span. aliso 'alder')
  • ἄξος axos 'timber' (Hes. Attic ὓλη hulê) (Cretan Doric ausos Attic alsos 'grove' little forest. (PIE *os- ash tree (OE. æsc ash tree), (Greek οξυά oxya, Albanian ah, beech), (Armenian հացի hac’i ash tree)
  • ἀορτής aortês, 'swordsman' (Hes. ξιφιστής; Homer ἄορ áor 'sword'; Attic ἀορτήρ aortēr 'swordstrap', Modern Greek αορτήρ aortír 'riflestrap'; hence aorta) (According to Suidas: Many now say the knapsack ἀβερτὴ abertê instead of aortê. Both the object and the word [are] Macedonian.
  • Ἀράντιδες Αrantides Erinyes (in dative ἀράντισιν ἐρινύσι) (Arae[49] name for Erinyes, arasimos accursed, araomai invoke, curse, pray or rhantizô sprinkle, purify.
  • ἄργελλα argella 'bathing hut'. Cimmerian ἄργιλλα or argila 'subterranean dwelling' (Ephorus in Strb. 5.4.5) PIE *areg-; borrowed into Balkan Latin and gave Romanian argea (pl. argele), "wooden hut", dialectal (Banat) arghela "stud farm"); cf. Sanskrit argalā 'latch, bolt', Old English reced "building, house", Albanian argësh "harrow, crude bridge of crossbars, crude raft supported by skin bladders"
  • ἀργι(ό)πους argiopous 'eagle' (LSJ Attic ἀργίπους argípous 'swift- or white-footed', PIE *hrg'i-pods < PIE *arg + PIE *ped)
  • Ἄρητος Arētos epithet or alternative of Herakles (Ares-like)
  • ἀρκόν arkon 'leisure, idleness' (LSJ Attic ἀργός argós 'lazy, idle' nom. sing., ἀργόν acc.)
  • ἀρφύς arhphys (Attic ἱμάς himas strap, rope), (ἁρπεδών harpedôn cord, yarn; ἁρπεδόνα Rhodes, Lindos II 2.37).
  • ἄσπιλος aspilos 'torrent' (Hes. χείμαῤῥος kheímarrhos, Attic ἄσπιλος áspilos 'without stain, spotless, pure')
  • βαβρήν babrên lees of olive-oil (LSJ: βάβρηκες babrêkes gums, or food in the teeth, βαβύας babuas mud)
  • βαθάρα bathara pukliê (Macedonian), purlos (Athamanian) (unattested; maybe food, atharê porridge, pyros wheat)
  • βίῤῥοξ birrhox dense, thick (LSJ: βειρόν beiron)
  • γάρκα garka rod (Attic charax) (EM: garkon axle-pin) (LSJ: garrha rod)
  • γόλα gola or goda bowels, intestines (Homeric cholades) PIE: ghel-ond-, ghol-n•d- stomach; bowels[50]
  • γοτάν gotan 'pig' acc. sing. (PIE *gʷou- 'cattle', (Attic βοτόν botón ' beast', in plural βοτά botá 'grazing animals') (Laconian grôna 'sow' female pig, and pl. grônades) (LSJ: goi, goi, to imitate the sound of pigs) (goita sheep or pig)
  • γυλλάς gyllas kind of glass (gyalas a Megarian cup)
  • γῶψ gôps pl. gopes macherel (Attic koloios) (LSJ: skôps a fish) (Modern Greek gopa 'bogue' fish pl. gopes)
  • δαίτας daitas caterer waiter (Attic daitros
  • δάνος danos 'death', (Hes. Attic thánatos θάνατος 'death', from root θαν- than-), PIE *dʰenh₂- 'to leave, δανoτής danotês (disaster, pain) Sophocles Lacaenae fr.338[51]
  • δανῶν danōn 'murderer' (Attic θανών thanōn dead, past participle)
  • δάρυλλος darullos 'oak' (Hes. Attic δρῦς drûs, PIE *doru-)
  • δρῆες drêes or δρῆγες drêges small birds (Attic strouthoi) (Elean δειρήτης deirêtês, strouthos, Nicander.Fr.123.) (LSJ: διγῆρες digêres strouthoi, δρίξ drix strouthos)
  • δώραξ dôrax spleen, splên (Attic θώραξ thôrax chest, corslet
  • ἐπιδειπνίς epideipnis Macedonian dessert
  • Ζειρηνίς Zeirênis epithet or alternative for Aphrodite (Seirênis Siren-like)
  • Ἠμαθία Êmathia ex-name of Macedonia, region of Emathia from mythological Emathus (Homeric amathos êmathoessa, river-sandy land, PIE *samadh.[52] Generally the coastal Lower Macedonia in contrast to mountainous Upper Macedonia. For meadow land (mē-2, m-e-t- to reap), see Pokorny.[53]
  • Θαῦλος Thaulos epithet or alternative of Ares (Θαύλια Thaulia 'festival in Doric Tarentum, θαυλίζειν thaulizein 'to celebrate like Dorians', Thessalian Ζεὺς Θαύλιος Zeus Thaulios, the only attested in epigraphy ten times, Athenian Ζεὺς Θαύλων Zeus Thaulôn, Athenian family Θαυλωνίδαι Thaulônidai
  • Θούριδες Thourides Nymphs Muses (Homeric thouros rushing, impetuous.
  • ἰζέλα izela wish, good luck (Attic agathêi tychêi) (Doric bale, abale, Arcadian zele) (Cretan delton agathon)[54] or Thracian zelas wine.
  • ἴλαξ ílax 'the holm-oak, evergreen or scarlet oak' (Hes. Attic πρῖνος prînos, Latin ilex)
  • ἰν δέᾳ in dea midday (Attic endia, mesêmbria) (Arcadian also in instead of Attic en)
  • κἄγχαρμον kancharmon having the lance up τὸ τὴν λόγχην ἄνω ἔχον (Hes. ἄγχαρμον ancharmon ἀνωφερῆ τὴν αἰχμήν ἔχων Ibyc? Stes?) having upwards the point of a spear)
  • κἄ, Crasis kai and, together, simultaneously + anô up (anôchmon hortatory password
  • κάραβος karabos
    • Macedonian 'gate, door' (Cf. karphos any small dry body,piece of wood (Hes. Attic 'meat roasted over coals'; Attic karabos 'stag-beetle'; 'crayfish'; 'light ship'; hence modern Greek καράβι karávi)
    • 'the worms in dry wood' (Attic 'stag-beetle, horned beetle; crayfish')
    • 'a sea creature' (Attic 'crayfish, prickly crustacean; stag-beetle')
  • καρπαία karpaia Thessalo-Macedonian mimic military dance (see also Carpaea) Homeric karpalimos swift (for foot) eager, ravenous.
  • κίκεῤῥοι kíkerroi 'chick-peas' [55] (Hes. Attic ὦχροι ōkhroi, PIE *k̂ik̂er- 'pea') (LSJ: kikeros land crocodile)
  • κομμάραι kommarai or komarai crawfishes (Attic karides) (LSJ: kammaros a kind of lobster, Epicharmus.60, Sophron.26, Rhinthon.18:-- also kammaris, idos Galen.6.735.) (komaris a fish Epicharmus.47.)
  • κόμβοι komboi 'molars' (Attic γομφίοι gomphioi, dim. of γόμφος gomphos 'a large, wedge-shaped bolt or nail; any bond or fastening', PIE *gombh-)
  • κυνοῦπες kynoupes or kynoutos bear (Hesychius kynoupeus, knoupeus, knôpeus) (kunôpês dog-faced) (knôps beast esp. serpent instead of kinôpeton, blind acc. Zonar (from knephas dark) (if kynoutos knôdês knôdalon beast)
  • λακεδάμα lakedáma ὕδωρ ἁλμυρὸν ἄλικι ἐπικεχυμένον salty water with alix, rice-wheat or fish-sauce.(Cf.skorodalmê 'sauce or pickle composed of brine and garlic'). According to Albrecht von Blumenthal,[30] -ama corresponds to Attic ἁλμυρός halmurós 'salty'; Cretan Doric hauma for Attic halmē; laked- is cognate to Proto-Germanic *lauka[56] leek, possibly related is Λακεδαίμων Laked-aímōn, the name of the Spartan land.
  • λείβηθρον leíbēthron 'stream' (Hes. Attic ῥεῖθρον rheîthron, also λιβάδιον libádion, 'a small stream', dim. of λιβάς libás; PIE *lei, 'to flow'); typical Greek productive suffix -θρον (-thron) (Macedonian toponym, Pierian Leibethra place/tomb of Orpheus)
  • ματτύης mattuês kind of bird (ματτύη mattuê a meat-dessert of Macedonian or Thessalian origin) (verb mattuazo to prepare the mattue) (Athenaeus)[57]
  • παραός paraos eagle or kind of eagle (Attic aetos, Pamphylian aibetos) (PIE *por- 'going, passage' + *awi- 'bird') (Greek para- 'beside' + Hes. aos wind) (It may exist as food in Lopado...pterygon)
  • περιπέτεια peripeteia or περίτια peritia Macedonian festival in month Peritios. (Hesychius text περί[πε]τ[ε]ια)
  • ῥάματα rhamata bunch of grapes (Ionic rhagmata, rhages Koine rhôgmata, rhôges, rhax rhôx)
  • ῥοῦτο rhouto this (neut.) (Attic τοῦτο touto)
  • ταγόναγα tagonaga Macedonian institution, administration (Thessalian ταγὸς tagos commander + ἄγωagô lead)

Other sources

  • αἰγίποψ aigipops eagle (EM 28.19) (error for argipous? maybe goat-eater? aix ,aigos + pepsis digestion) (Cf.eagle chelônophagos turtle-eater)[58]
  • ἀργυρὰσπιδες argyraspides (wiki Argyraspides) chrysaspides and chalkaspides (golden and bronze-shielded)[59]
  • δράμις dramis a Macedonian bread (Thessalian bread daratos)(Athamanian bread dramix. (Athenaeus)[60]
  • καυσία kausia felt hat used by Macedonians, forming part of the regalia of the kings.
  • κοῖος koios number (Athenaeus[61] when talking about Koios, the Titan of intelligence; and the Macedonians use koios as synonymous with arithmos (LSJ: koeô mark, perceive, hear koiazô pledge, Hes. compose s.v. κοίασον, σύνθες) (Laocoön, thyoskoos observer of sacrifices, akouô hear) (All from PIE root *keu[62] to notice, observe, feel; to hear).
  • πεζέταιροι pezetairoi (wiki Pezhetairoi), Hetairidia, Macedonian religious festival (Attic πεζοί,πεζομάχοι) (Aeolic πέσδοι)[63]
  • Πύδνα Púdna, Pydna toponym (Pokorny[64] Attic πυθμήν puthmēn 'bottom, sole, base of a vessel'; PIE *bʰudʰnā; Attic πύνδαξ pýndax 'bottom of vessel') (Cretan,Pytna[65] Hierapytna, Sacred Pytna[66])
  • σίγυνος sigynos spear (Cypriotic sigynon) (Illyrian sibyne) (Origin: Illyrian acc. to Fest.p. 453 L., citing Ennius) (Cyprian acc. to Herodotus and Aristotle[67] Il. cc., Scythian acc. to Sch.Par.A.R.4.320 (cf. 111)
  • σφύραινα sphuraina, hammer-fish sphyraena (Strattis, Makedones (fr. 28) – (Attic. κέστρα, kestra) (cestra, needle-fish (modern Greek fish σφυρίδα, sfyrida)
  • ὐετής uetês of the same year Marsyas (Attic autoetês, Poetic oietês)
  • χάρων charôn lion (Attic/Poetic fierce, for lion, eagle instead of charopos, charops bright-eyed)[68]

Proposed

A number of Hesychius words are listed orphan; some of them have been proposed as Macedonian[69]

  • ἀγέρδα agerda wild pear-tree (Attic ἄχερδος acherdos).
  • ἀδαλός adalos charcoal dust (Attic αἴθαλος aithalos, ἄσβολος asbolos)
  • ἄδδεε addee imp. hurry up ἐπείγου (Attic thee of theô run)
  • ἄδις adis 'hearth' (Hes. ἐσχάρα eskhára, LSJ Attic αἶθος aîthos 'fire, burning heat')
  • αἰδῶσσα aidôssa (Attic aithousa portico, corridor, verandah, a loggia leading from aulê yard to prodomos)
  • βάσκιοι baskioi 'fasces' (Hes. Attic δεσμοὶ φρῡγάνων desmoì phrūgánōn, Pokorny βασκευταί baskeutaí, Attic φασκίδες phaskídes, Attic φάσκωλος pháskōlos 'leather sack', PIE *bʰasko-)
  • βίξ bix sphinx (Boeotian phix), (Attic sphinx)
  • δαλάγχα dalancha sea (Attic thalatta) (Ionic thalassa)
  • δεδάλαι dedalai package, bundle (Attic dethla, desmai)
  • ἐσκόροδος eskorodos tenon (Attic tormos σκόρθος skorthos tornos slice, lathe)
  • Εὐδαλαγῖνες Eudalagines Graces Χάριτες (Attic Εὐθαλγῖνες Euthalgines)
  • κάναδοι kanadoi 'jaws' nom. pl. (Attic γνάθοι gnathoi, PIE *genu, 'jaw') (Laconian καναδόκα kanadoka notch (V) of an arrow χηλὴ ὀϊστοῦ)
  • λαίβα laiba shield (Doric λαία laia, λαῖφα laipha) (Attic aspis)
  • λάλαβις lalabis storm (Attic lailaps)
  • ὁμοδάλιον homodalion isoetes plant (θάλλω thallô bloom)
  • ῥουβοτός rhoubotos potion (Attic rhophema) rhopheo suck, absorb rhoibdeô suck with noise.

Macedonian in Classical sources

Among the references that have been discussed as possibly bearing some witness to the linguistic situation in Macedonia, there is a sentence from a fragmentary dialogue, apparently between an Athenian and a Macedonian, in an extant fragment of the 5th century BC comedy 'Macedonians' by the Athenian poet Strattis (fr. 28), where a stranger is portrayed as speaking in a rural Greek dialect. His language contains expressions such as ὕμμες ὡττικοί for ὑμεὶς ἀττικοί "you Athenians", ὕμμες being also attested in Homer, Sappho (Lesbian) and Theocritus (Doric), while ὡττικοί appears only in "funny country bumpkin" contexts of Attic comedy.[70]

Another text that has been quoted as evidence is a passage from Livy (lived 59 BC-14 AD) in his Ab urbe condita (31.29). Describing political negotiations between Macedonians and Aetolians in the late 3rd century BC, Livy has a Macedonian ambassador argue that Aetolians, Acarnanians and Macedonians were "men of the same language".[71] This has been interpreted as referring to a shared North-West Greek speech (as opposed to Attic Koiné).[72] In another passage, Livy states that an announcement was translated from Latin to Greek for Macedonians to understand.[73]

Quintus Curtius Rufus, Philotas's trial[74] and the statement that the Greek-speaking Branchidae had common language with the Macedonians.[75]

Over time, "Macedonian" (μακεδονικός), when referring to language (and related expressions such as μακεδονίζειν; to speak in the Macedonian fashion) acquired the meaning of Koine Greek.[76]

Contributions to the Koine

As a consequence of the Macedonians' role in the formation of the Koine, Macedonian contributed considerable elements, unsurprisingly including some military terminology (διμοιρίτης, ταξίαρχος, ὑπασπισταί, etc.). Among the many contributions were the general use of the first declension grammar for male and female nouns with an -as ending, attested in the genitive of Macedonian coinage from the early 4th century BC of Amyntas III (ΑΜΥΝΤΑ in the genitive; the Attic form that fell into disuse would be ΑΜΥΝΤΟΥ). There were changes in verb conjugation such as in the Imperative δέξα attested in Macedonian sling stones found in Asiatic battlefields, that became adopted in place of the Attic forms. Koine Greek established a spirantisation of beta, gamma and delta, which has been attributed to the Macedonian influence.[77]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Oxford English Dictionary (1989), Macedonian, Simpson J. A. & Weiner E. S. C. (eds), Oxford: Oxford University Press, Vol. IX, ISBN 0-19-861186-2 (set) ISBN 0-19-861221-4 (vol. IX) p. 153
  2. ^ Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged (1976), Macedonian, USA:Merriam-Webster, G. & C. Merriam Co., vol. II (H–R) ISBN 0-87779-101-5

References

  1. ^ Macedonian at MultiTree on the Linguist List
  2. ^ B. Joseph (2001): "Ancient Greek". In: J. Garry et al. (eds.) Facts about the World's Major Languages: An Encyclopedia of the World's Major Languages, Past and Present.
  3. ^ Blažek, Václav (2005). "Paleo-Balkanian Languages I: Hellenic Languages", Studia Minora Facultatis Philosophicae Universitatis Brunensis 10. pp. 15–34.
  4. ^ Borza, Eugene N. (28 September 1992) [1990]. "Who Were the Macedonians?". In the Shadow of Olympus: The Emergence of Macedon. Princeton University Press (published 1992). p. 94. ISBN 978-0-691-00880-6. One can only speculate that that [Ancient Macedonian] dialect declined with the rise in use of standard koinē Greek. The main language of formal discourse and official communication became Greek by the fourth century [BC]. Whether the dialect(s) were eventually replaced by standard Greek, or were preserved as part of a two–tiered system of speech—one for official use, the other idiomatic for traditional ceremonies, rituals, or rough soldiers' talk—is problematic and requires more evidence and further study.
  5. ^ Engels, Johannes (2010). "Macedonians and Greeks". In Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (eds.). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 94. ISBN 978-1-4051-7936-2. However, with respect to the discussion in this chapter it seems to be quite clear that (a) ancient Macedonian at some date during the Hellenistic or Roman imperial era was completely replaced by koine Greek and died out, and (b) that ancient Macedonian has no relationship with modern Macedonian which together with Bulgarian belongs to the eastern branch of southern Slavonic languages.
  6. ^ Joseph Roisman; Ian Worthington (7 July 2011). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. John Wiley & Sons. p. 94. ISBN 978-1-4443-5163-7. Many surviving public and private inscriptions indicate that in the Macedonian kingdom there was no dominant written language but standard Attic and later on koine Greek.
  7. ^ Lewis, D. M.; Boardman, John (2000). The Cambridge ancient history, 3rd edition, Volume VI. Cambridge University Press. p. 730. ISBN 978-0-521-23348-4.
  8. ^ Sarah B. Pomeroy, Stanley M. Burstein, Walter Donlan, Jennifer Tolbert Roberts, A Brief History of Ancient Greece: Politics, Society, and Culture, Oxford University Press, 2008, p.289
  9. ^ a b Crespo, Emilio (2017). "The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. p. 329. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
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  11. ^ a b c Joseph, Brian D. (2001). "Ancient Greek". In Garry, Jane; Rubino, Carl; Bodomo, Adams B.; Faber, Alice; French, Robert (eds.). Facts about the World's Languages: An Encyclopedia of the World's Major Languages, Past and Present. H. W. Wilson Company. p. 256. ISBN 9780824209704. Family: Ancient Greek is generally taken to be the only representative (though note the existence of different dialects) of the Greek or Hellenic branch of Indo-European. There is some dispute as to whether Ancient Macedonian (the native language of Philip and Alexander), if it has any special affinity to Greek at all, is a dialect within Greek (...) or a sibling language to all of the known Ancient Greek dialects. If the latter view is correct, then Macedonian and Greek would be the two subbranches of a group within Indo-European which could more properly be called Hellenic. Related Languages: As noted above, Ancient Macedonian might be the language most closely related to Greek, perhaps even a dialect of Greek. The slender evidence is open to different interpretations, so that no definitive answer is really possible; but most likely, Ancient Macedonian was not simply an Ancient Greek dialect on a par with Attic or Aeolic (...).
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  18. ^ Roisman, Worthington, 2010, "A Companion to Ancient Macedonia", Chapter 5: Johannes Engels, "Macedonians and Greeks", p. 95:"This (i.e. Pella curse tablet) has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north-western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect".
  19. ^ Dosuna, J. Méndez (2012). "Ancient Macedonian as a Greek dialect: A critical survey on recent work (Greek, English, French, German text)". In Giannakis, Georgios K. (ed.). Ancient Macedonia: Language, History, Culture. Centre for Greek Language. p. 145. ISBN 978-960-7779-52-6.
  20. ^ Babiniotis, Georgios (2014). "Ancient Macedonian: A case study". Macedonian Studies Journal. Australia. 1 (1): 7. On all levels (phonological, grammatical and lexical) common structural features of Macedonian and Doric lead us to classify Macedonian within the Doric, especially the Northwestern group of Doric dialects.
  21. ^ Matzinger, Joachim (2016). Die Altbalkanischen Sprachen (PDF) (Speech) (in German). Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
  22. ^ Brixhe, Claude (2018). "Macedonian". In Klein, Jared; Joseph, Brian; Fritz, Matthias (eds.). Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics. Vol. 3. De Gruyter. pp. 1862–1867. ISBN 978-3-11-054243-1.
  23. ^ Hammond, N.G.L (1997). Collected Studies: Further studies on various topics. A.M. Hakkert. p. 79.
  24. ^ Worthington, Ian (2012). Alexander the Great: A Reader. Routledge. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-136-64003-2.
  25. ^ Vladimir Georgiev, "The Genesis of the Balkan Peoples", The Slavonic and East European Review 44:103:285-297 (July 1966)
    "Ancient Macedonian is closely related to Greek, and Macedonian and Greek are descended from a common Greek-Macedonian idiom that was spoken till about the second half of the 3rd millennium BC. From the 4th century BC on began the Hellenization of ancient Macedonian."
  26. ^ Eric Hamp & Douglas Adams (2013) "The Expansion of the Indo-European Languages", Sino-Platonic Papers, vol 239.
  27. ^ Exceptions to the rule:
    • ἀρφύς arhphys Macedonian (Attic ἁρπεδών harpedôn cord, yarn)
    • βάγαρον bagaron (Attic χλιαρόν chliaron' 'warm') (cf. Attic phôgô 'roast') (Laconian)
    • βώνημα bônêma speech (Homeric, Ionic eirêma eireo) (cf. Attic phônêma sound, speech) (Laconian)
    • κεβλὴ keblê Callimachus Fr.140 Macedonian κεβ(α)λή keb(a)lē versus Attic κεφαλή kephalē ('head')
    • κεβλήπυρις keblēpyris ('red-cap bird'), (Aristophanes Birds)
    • κεβλήγονος keblêgonos born from the head, Euphorion 108 for Athena, with its seed in its head Nicander Alexipharmaca 433.
    • πέχαρι pechari deer (Laconian berkios) Amerias
    • Ὑπερβέρετος Hyperberetos Cretan month June, Macedonian September Hyperberetaios (Hellenic Calendars) (Attic hyperpheretês supreme, hyperpherô transfer,excel)
  28. ^ Greek Questions 292e – Question 9 – Why do Delphians call one of their months Bysios [1].
  29. ^ Česko-jihoslovenská revue, Volume 4, 1934, p. 187.
  30. ^ a b Albrecht von Blumenthal, Hesychstudien, Stuttgart, 1930, 21.
  31. ^ Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon, κεβλήπυρις. Perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved on 2013-07-21.
  32. ^ Crespo, Emilio (2017). "The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. p. 344. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  33. ^ Olivier Masson, "Sur la notation occasionnelle du digamma grec par d'autres consonnes et la glose macédonienne abroutes", Bulletin de la Société de linguistique de Paris, 90 (1995) 231–239. Also proposed by O. Hoffmann and J. Kalleris.
  34. ^ a b A history of ancient Greek: from the beginnings to late antiquity, Maria Chritē, Maria Arapopoulou, Cambridge University Press (2007), p. 439–441
  35. ^ a b Packard Institute epigraphic database http://epigraphy.packhum.org/inscriptions//main 2007-11-21 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ Eric Lhote (2006) Les lamelles Oraculaires de Dodone. Droz, Geneve.
  37. ^ Roberts, E.S., An Introduction to Greek Epigraphy vol. 1 no. 237
  38. ^ Greek Personal Names: Their Value as Evidence, Elaine Matthews, Simon Hornblower, Peter Marshall Fraser, British Academy, Oxford University Press (2000), p. 103
  39. ^ a b Engels, Johannes (2011). "Macedonians and Greeks". In Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (eds.). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-4443-5163-7.
  40. ^ a b c Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (2020). Ancient Macedonia. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 78. ISBN 978-3-11-071876-8.
  41. ^ Athens, bottom-IG I³ 89 – Kalindoia-Meletemata 11 K31 – Pydna-SEG 52:617,I (6) till SEG 52:617,VI – Mygdonia-SEG 49:750
  42. ^ Greek Personal Names: Their Value as Evidence [2] by Simon Hornblower, Elaine Matthews
  43. ^ SEG 49-750. Oraiokastro. Defixio, Classical period – Brill Reference
  44. ^ a b Anson, Edward M. (2010). "Why Study Ancient Macedonia and What This Companion is About". In Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (eds.). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Oxford, Chichester, & Malden: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 17, n. 57, n. 58. ISBN 978-1-4051-7936-2.
  45. ^ "...but we may tentatively conclude that Macedonian is a dialect related to North-West Greek.", Olivier Masson, French linguist, “Oxford Classical Dictionary: Macedonian Language”, 1996.
  46. ^ J. P. Mallory & D.Q Adams – Encyclopedia of Indo-European culture, Chicago-London: Fitzroy Dearborn. pp. 361. ISBN 1-884964-98-2
  47. ^ Les anciens Macedoniens. Etude linguistique et historique by J. N. Kalleris
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  49. ^ "ARAE: Greek goddesses or spirits of curses; mythology: ARAI". Theoi.com. Retrieved 2013-02-03.
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  58. ^ Kalleris, p. 238–240
  59. ^ Kalleris, p. 108
  60. ^ Athenaeus Deipnosophists 3.114b.
  61. ^ Deipnosophists 10.455e.
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  71. ^ Livy, The History of Rome, 31.29.15, on Perseus
  72. ^ A. Panayotou: The position of the Macedonian dialect. In: Maria Arapopoulou, Maria Chritē, Anastasios-Phoivos Christides (eds.), A History of Ancient Greek: From the Beginnings to Late Antiquity, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007, pp. 433–458 (Google Books).
  73. ^ Livy, The History of Rome, 45.29, on Perseus
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  75. ^ Quintus Curtius Rufus, Historiae Alexandri Magni, VII.5.33, (Loeb edition, Latin), (John C. Rolfe, English translation)
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Further reading

  • Brixhe, Claude & Anna Panayotou, “Le Macédonien”, Langues indo-européennes, ed. Françoise Bader. Paris: CNRS, 1994, pp 205–220. ISBN 2-271-05043-X
  • Chadwick, John, The Prehistory of the Greek Language. Cambridge, 1963.
  • Crossland, R. A., “The Language of the Macedonians”, Cambridge Ancient History, vol. 3, part 1, Cambridge 1982.
  • Hammond, Nicholas G.L., “Literary Evidence for Macedonian Speech”, Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, Vol. 43, No. 2. (1994), pp. 131–142.
  • Hatzopoulos, M. B. “Le Macédonien: Nouvelles données et théories nouvelles”, Ancient Macedonia, Sixth International Symposium, vol. 1. Institute for Balkan Studies, 1999.
  • Ilievski, Petar Hristov [de]. "Position of the Ancient Macedonian Language and the Name of the Contemporary Makedonski". In: Studia Minora Facultatis Philosophicae Universitatis Brunensis (Brown University), E36 (1991). pp. 129-140.
  • Kalléris, Jean. Les Anciens Macédoniens, étude linguistique et historique. Athens: Institut français d'Athènes, 1988.
  • Katičić, Radoslav. Ancient Languages of the Balkans. The Hague—Paris: Mouton, 1976.
  • Neroznak, V. Paleo-Balkan languages. Moscow, 1978.
  • Rhomiopoulou, Katerina. An Outline of Macedonian History and Art. Greek Ministry of Culture and Science, 1980.
  • Čašule, Ilija [mk]. "The Etymology and Correlation of the Ancient Macedonian Gloss ‘lakedama’ and Phrygian ‘lakedokey’". In: Živa Antika [Antiquité Vivante] 71 (2021): 19–26. DOI: https://www.doi.org/10.47054/ZIVA21711-2019ch
  • Die Makedonen: Ihre Sprache und ihr Volkstum by Otto Hoffmann

External links

  • Ancient Macedonian as a Greek dialect: A critical survey on recent work (Greek, English, French, German text)
  • The speech of the ancient Macedonians, in the light of recent epigraphic discoveries
  • Jona Lendering, Ancient Macedonia web page on livius.org
  • Heinrich Tischner on Hesychius' words 2010-11-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • www.sil.org: ISO639-3, entry for Ancient Macedonian (XMK)

ancient, macedonian, language, modern, slavic, language, macedonian, language, other, uses, ancient, macedonian, disambiguation, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phone. For the modern Slavic language see Macedonian language For other uses see Ancient Macedonian disambiguation This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why May 2019 Ancient Macedonian the language of the ancient Macedonians either a dialect of Ancient Greek or a separate Hellenic language was spoken in the kingdom of Macedonia during the 1st millennium BC and belongs to the Indo European language family It gradually fell out of use during the 4th century BC marginalized by the use of Attic Greek by the Macedonian aristocracy the Ancient Greek dialect that became the basis of Koine Greek the lingua franca of the Hellenistic period 4 It became extinct during either the Hellenistic or Roman imperial period and was entirely replaced by Koine Greek 5 MacedonianRegionMacedonEra1st millennium BC 1 Language familyIndo European Hellenic 2 3 MacedonianLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code xmk class extiw title iso639 3 xmk xmk a Linguist ListxmkGlottologNoneWhile the bulk of surviving public and private inscriptions found in ancient Macedonia were written in Attic Greek and later in Koine Greek 6 7 fragmentary documentation of a vernacular local variety comes from onomastic evidence ancient glossaries and recent epigraphic discoveries in the Greek region of Macedonia such as the Pella curse tablet 8 9 10 This local variety is usually classified by scholars as a dialect of Northwest Doric Greek and occasionally as an Aeolic Greek dialect or a distinct sister language of Greek Contents 1 Classification 2 Properties 2 1 Phonology 2 2 Morphology 3 Onomastics 3 1 Anthroponymy 3 2 Toponymy 4 Calendar 5 Epigraphy 6 Hesychius glossary 6 1 Other sources 6 2 Proposed 7 Macedonian in Classical sources 8 Contributions to the Koine 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksClassification EditDue to the fragmentary attestation of this dialect or language various interpretations are possible 11 12 Suggested classifications of ancient Macedonian include 13 14 A Greek dialect part of the Northwest Doric group of dialects pioneered by Friedrich Wilhelm Sturz de 1808 15 and subsequently supported by Olivier Masson 1996 16 Michael Meier Brugger 2003 17 Johannes Engels 2010 18 J Mendez Dosuna 2012 19 Georgios Babiniotis 2014 20 Joachim Matzinger 2016 21 Emilio Crespo 2017 9 Claude Brixhe 2018 22 and M B Hatzopoulos 2020 15 A Greek dialect related to or a version of Aeolic Greek suggested by August Fick 1874 16 Otto Hoffmann 1906 16 N G L Hammond 1997 23 and Ian Worthington 2012 24 A sister language of Greek according to a scheme in which Macedonian and Greek are the two branches of a Greco Macedonian subgroup sometimes called Hellenic 11 suggested by Georgiev 1966 25 Joseph 2001 11 and Hamp 2013 26 Properties EditBecause of the fragmentary sources of Ancient Macedonian only a little is understood about the special features of the language A notable sound law is that the Proto Indo European voiced aspirates bʰ dʰ gʰ sometimes appear as voiced stops b d g written b d g whereas they were generally unvoiced as pʰ tʰ kʰ f 8 x elsewhere in Ancient Greek 27 Macedonian danos danos death from PIE dhenh2 to leave compared to Attic 8anatos thanatos Macedonian ἀbroῦtes abroutes or ἀbroῦϝes abrouwes compared to Attic ὀfrῦs ophrus for eyebrows Macedonian Berenikh Berenike compared to Attic Ferenikh Pherenike bearing victory Personal name Macedonian ἄdraia adraia bright weather compared to Attic aἰ8ria aithria from PIE h2aidh Macedonian baskioi baskioi fasces compared to Attic faskwlos phaskōlos leather sack from PIE bhasko According to Herodotus 7 73 c 440 BC the Macedonians claimed that the Phryges were called Bryges before they migrated from Thrace to Anatolia around 8th 7th century BC According to Plutarch Moralia 28 Macedonians use b instead of ph while Delphians use b in the place of p Macedonian mageiros mageiros butcher was a loan from Doric into Attic Vittore Pisani has suggested an ultimately Macedonian origin for the word which could then be cognate to maxaira makhaira knife lt PIE magh to fight 29 If gotan gotan pig is related to gwou cattle this would indicate that the labiovelars were either intact or merged with the velars unlike the usual Greek treatment Attic boῦs bous Such deviations however are not unknown in Greek dialects compare Laconian Doric the dialect of Sparta glep glep for common Greek blep blep as well as Doric glaxwn glachōn and Ionic glhxwn glechōn for common Greek blhxwn blechōn 30 A number of examples suggest that voiced velar stops were devoiced especially word initially kanadoi kanadoi jaws lt PIE genu komboys kombous molars lt PIE gombh within words ἀrkon arkon Attic ἀrgos argos the Macedonian toponym Akesamenai from the Pierian name Akesamenos if Akesa is cognate to Greek agassomai agamai to astonish cf the Thracian name Agassamenos In Aristophanes The Birds the form keblhpyris keblepyris red head the name of a bird perhaps the goldfinch or redpoll is found 31 showing a Macedonian style voiced stop in place of a standard Greek unvoiced aspirate keb a lh keb a le versus kefalh kephale head Emilio Crespo wrote that the voicing of voiceless stops and the development of aspirates into voiced fricatives turns out to be the outcome of an internal development of Macedonian as a dialect of Greek without excluding the presence of interference from other languages or of any linguistic substrate or adstrate as also argued by M Hatzopoulos 32 A number of the Macedonian words particularly in Hesychius of Alexandria lexicon are disputed i e some do not consider them actual Macedonian words and some may have been corrupted in the transmission Thus abroutes may be read as abrouwes abroyϝes with tau T replacing a digamma 33 If so this word would perhaps be encompassable within a Greek dialect however others e g A Meillet see the dental as authentic and think that this specific word would perhaps belong to an Indo European language different from Greek citation needed A Panayotou summarizes some features generally identified through ancient texts and epigraphy 34 Phonology Edit Occasional development of voiced aspirates bh dh gh into voiced stops b d g e g Berenika Attic Ferenikh Retention of a e g Maxatas also present in Epirotic 35 a as a result of contraction between a and ɔ Apocope of short vowels in prepositions in synthesis parkatti8emai Attic parakatati8emai Syncope hyphairesis and diphthongization are used to avoid hiatus e g 8etima Attic 8eotimh compare with Epirotic Lageta Doric Laogἐta 35 Occasional retention of the pronunciation u of u in local cult epithets or nicknames Koynagidas Kynagidas Raising of ɔ to u in proximity to nasal e g Kanoyn Attic Kanwn Simplification of the sequence ign to i n ginomai Attic gignomai Loss of aspiration of the consonant cluster sth gt st genestai Attic genes8ai Morphology Edit Ancient Macedonian morphology is shared with ancient Epirus including some of the oldest inscriptions from Dodona 36 The morphology of the first declension nouns with an as ending is also shared with Thessalian e g Epitaph for Pyrrhiadas Kierion 37 First declension masculine and feminine in as and a respectively e g Peykestas Laomaga First declension masculine genitive singular in a e g Maxata First declension genitive plural in ᾶn First person personal pronoun dative singular ἐmin Temporal conjunction ὁpoka Possibly a non sigmatic nominative masculine singular in the first declension ἱppota Attic ἱppoths Onomastics EditAnthroponymy Edit M Hatzopoulos and Johannes Engels summarize the Macedonian anthroponymy that is names borne by people from Macedonia before the expansion beyond the Axios or people undoubtedly hailing from this area after the expansion as follows 38 39 Epichoric local Greek names that either differ from the phonology of the introduced Attic or that remained almost confined to Macedonians throughout antiquity Panhellenic common Greek names Identifiable non Greek Thracian and Illyrian names Names without a clear Greek etymology that can t however be ascribed to any identifiable non Greek linguistic group Common in the creation of ethnics is the use of esths estos especially when derived from sigmatic nouns ὄros gt Ὀresths but also Dῖon gt Diastai 34 Per Engels the above material supports that Macedonian anthroponymy was predominantly Greek in character 39 Toponymy Edit The toponyms of Macedonia proper are generally Greek though some of them show a particular phonology and a few others are non Greek Calendar EditFurther information Ancient Macedonian calendar The Macedonian calendar s origins go back to Greek prehistory The names of the Macedonian months just like most of the names of Greek months are derived from feasts and related celebrations in honor of the Greek gods 40 Most of them combine a Macedonian dialectal form with a clear Greek etymology e g Dῐos from Zeus Peritios from Heracles Peritas Guardian 3andikos 3an8ikos from Xanthos the blond probably a reference to Heracles Artemisios from Artemis etc with the possible exception of one which is attested in other Greek calendars as well 40 According to Martin P Nilsson the Macedonian calendar is formed like a regular Greek one and the names of the months attest the Greek nationality of the Macedonians 40 Epigraphy EditMacedonian onomastics the earliest epigraphical documents attesting substantial numbers of Macedonian proper names are the second Athenian alliance decree with Perdiccas II 417 413 BC the decree of Kalindoia 335 300 BC and seven curse tablets of the 4th century BC bearing mostly names 41 42 Octadrachm of Alexander I of Macedon early 5th century B C Stater of Perdiccas II of Macedon mid to late 5th century B C The Pella curse tablet 4th century B C Binding spell 4th century B C Oraiokastro 43 Funerary stele with an epigram on the top mid 4th century B C VerginaAbout 99 of the roughly 6 300 inscriptions discovered by archaeologists within the confines of ancient Macedonia were written in the Greek language using the Greek alphabet 44 The legends in all currently discovered coins also in Greek 44 The Pella curse tablet a text written in a distinct Doric Greek dialect found in 1986 and dated to between mid to early 4th century BC has been forwarded as an argument that the ancient Macedonian language was a dialect of North Western Greek part of the Doric dialect group 45 Hesychius glossary EditThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A body of idiomatic words has been assembled from ancient sources mainly from coin inscriptions and from the 5th century lexicon of Hesychius of Alexandria amounting to about 150 words and 200 proper names though the number of considered words sometimes differs from scholar to scholar The majority of these words can be confidently assigned to Greek albeit some words would appear to reflect a dialectal form of Greek There are however a number of words that are not easily identifiable as Greek and reveal for example voiced stops where Greek shows voiceless aspirates 46 marked words which have been corrupted ἄbagna abagna roses amaranta unwithered Attic ῥoda rhoda Aeolic broda broda roses LSJ amarantos unfading Amaranth flower Aeolic ἄba aba youthful prime ἁgnos hagnos pure chaste unsullied or epithet aphagna from aphagnizo purify 47 If abagnon is the proper name for rhodon rose then it is cognate to Persian باغ baġ garden Gothic 𐌱𐌰𐌲𐌼𐍃 bagms tree and Greek bakanon cabbage seed Finally a Phrygian borrowing is highly possible if we think of the famous Gardens of Midas where roses grow of themselves see Herodotus 8 138 2 Athenaeus 15 683 ἀbarknᾷ abarknai komᾷ tὲ Makedones komai ἄbarkna abarkna hunger famine ἀbary abaru oregano Hes ὀriganon origanon LSJ bary baru perfume used in incense Attic bary baru heavy LSJ amarakon sweet Origanum Majorana Hes for origanon ἀgribro3 agribrox ἄbromon abromon ἄrtifos artiphos keblhnh keblene ἀbloh ἀlogeῖ abloe alogei Text Corrupted ἀbloh spende Makedones ἀlogeῖ speῖson Makedones spendo ἀbroῦtes or ἀbroῦϜes abroutes or abrouwes eyebrows Hes Attic ὀfrῦs ophrus acc pl ὀfryes ophrues nom PIE bʰru Serbian obrve Lithuanian bruvis Persian ابرو abru Koine Greek ophrudia Modern Greek frydia frydia ἀgkalis ankalis Attic weight burden load Macedonian sickle Hes Attic ἄx8os akhthos drepanon drepanon LSJ Attic ἀgkalis ankalis bundle or in pl ἀgkalai ankalai arms body parts ἄgkalos ankalos armful bundle ἀgkalh ankale the bent arm or anything closely enfolding as the arms of the sea PIE ank to bend ἀgkylis ankylis barb Oppianus C 1 155 ἄddai addai poles of a chariot or car logs Attic ῥymoὶ rhumoi Aeolic usdoi Attic ozoi branches twigs PIE H o sd o branch ἀdῆ ade clear sky or the upper air Hes oὐranos ouranos sky LSJ and Pokorny Attic aἰ8hr aither ether the upper purer air hence clear sky heaven ἄdiskon adiskon potion cocktail Attic kykeon ἄdraia adraia fine weather open sky Hes Attic aἰ8ria aithria Epirotan ἀdria PIE aidh Ἀeropes Aeropes tribe wind faced aero opsis aerops opos Boeotian name for the bird merops ἀkontion akontion spine or backbone anything ridged like the backbone ridge of a hill or mountain Attic rhachis Attic akontion spear javelin Aeolic akontion part of troops ἀkrea akrea girl Attic korh kore Ionic koure Doric Aeolic kora Arcadian korwa Laconian kyrsanis Ἀkrea epithet of Aphrodite in Cyprus instead of Akraia of the heights Epithet of a goddess from an archaic Corcyraic inscription orϝos hiaros tas Akrias ἀkroynoi akrounoi boundary stones nom pl Hes ὃroi horoi LSJ Attic ἄkron akron at the end or extremity from ἀkh ake point edge PIE ak summit point or sharp ἀlih alie boar or boarfish Attic kapros PIE ol el red brown in animal and tree names 48 Homeric ellos fawn Attic elaphos deer alke elk ἄliza aliza also alixa White Poplar Attic leykh leuke Epirotan ἄlyza Thessalian alphinia LSJ ἄlyza aluza globularia alypum Pokorny Attic ἐlath elate fir spruce PIE ol el P Gmc and Span aliso alder ἄ3os axos timber Hes Attic ὓlh hule Cretan Doric ausos Attic alsos grove little forest PIE os ash tree OE aesc ash tree Greek o3ya oxya Albanian ah beech Armenian հացի hac i ash tree ἀorths aortes swordsman Hes 3ifisths Homer ἄor aor sword Attic ἀorthr aorter swordstrap Modern Greek aorthr aortir riflestrap hence aorta According to Suidas Many now say the knapsack ἀbertὴ aberte instead of aorte Both the object and the word are Macedonian Ἀrantides Arantides Erinyes in dative ἀrantisin ἐrinysi Arae 49 name for Erinyes arasimos accursed araomai invoke curse pray or rhantizo sprinkle purify ἄrgella argella bathing hut Cimmerian ἄrgilla or argila subterranean dwelling Ephorus in Strb 5 4 5 PIE areg borrowed into Balkan Latin and gave Romanian argea pl argele wooden hut dialectal Banat arghela stud farm cf Sanskrit argala latch bolt Old English reced building house Albanian argesh harrow crude bridge of crossbars crude raft supported by skin bladders ἀrgi o poys argiopous eagle LSJ Attic ἀrgipoys argipous swift or white footed PIE hrg i pods lt PIE arg PIE ped Ἄrhtos Aretos epithet or alternative of Herakles Ares like ἀrkon arkon leisure idleness LSJ Attic ἀrgos argos lazy idle nom sing ἀrgon acc ἀrfys arhphys Attic ἱmas himas strap rope ἁrpedwn harpedon cord yarn ἁrpedona Rhodes Lindos II 2 37 ἄspilos aspilos torrent Hes xeimaῤῥos kheimarrhos Attic ἄspilos aspilos without stain spotless pure babrhn babren lees of olive oil LSJ babrhkes babrekes gums or food in the teeth babyas babuas mud ba8ara bathara puklie Macedonian purlos Athamanian unattested maybe food athare porridge pyros wheat biῤῥo3 birrhox dense thick LSJ beiron beiron garka garka rod Attic charax EM garkon axle pin LSJ garrha rod gola gola or goda bowels intestines Homeric cholades PIE ghel ond ghol n d stomach bowels 50 gotan gotan pig acc sing PIE gʷou cattle Attic boton boton beast in plural bota bota grazing animals Laconian grona sow female pig and pl gronades LSJ goi goi to imitate the sound of pigs goita sheep or pig gyllas gyllas kind of glass gyalas a Megarian cup gῶps gops pl gopes macherel Attic koloios LSJ skops a fish Modern Greek gopa bogue fish pl gopes daitas daitas caterer waiter Attic daitros danos danos death Hes Attic thanatos 8anatos death from root 8an than PIE dʰenh to leave danoths danotes disaster pain Sophocles Lacaenae fr 338 51 danῶn danōn murderer Attic 8anwn thanōn dead past participle daryllos darullos oak Hes Attic drῦs drus PIE doru drῆes drees or drῆges dreges small birds Attic strouthoi Elean deirhths deiretes strouthos Nicander Fr 123 LSJ digῆres digeres strouthoi dri3 drix strouthos dwra3 dorax spleen splen Attic 8wra3 thorax chest corslet ἐpideipnis epideipnis Macedonian dessert Zeirhnis Zeirenis epithet or alternative for Aphrodite Seirenis Siren like Ἠma8ia Emathia ex name of Macedonia region of Emathia from mythological Emathus Homeric amathos emathoessa river sandy land PIE samadh 52 Generally the coastal Lower Macedonia in contrast to mountainous Upper Macedonia For meadow land me 2 m e t to reap see Pokorny 53 8aῦlos Thaulos epithet or alternative of Ares 8aylia Thaulia festival in Doric Tarentum 8aylizein thaulizein to celebrate like Dorians Thessalian Zeὺs 8aylios Zeus Thaulios the only attested in epigraphy ten times Athenian Zeὺs 8aylwn Zeus Thaulon Athenian family 8aylwnidai Thaulonidai 8oyrides Thourides Nymphs Muses Homeric thouros rushing impetuous ἰzela izela wish good luck Attic agathei tychei Doric bale abale Arcadian zele Cretan delton agathon 54 or Thracian zelas wine ἴla3 ilax the holm oak evergreen or scarlet oak Hes Attic prῖnos prinos Latin ilex ἰn deᾳ in dea midday Attic endia mesembria Arcadian also in instead of Attic en kἄgxarmon kancharmon having the lance up tὸ tὴn logxhn ἄnw ἔxon Hes ἄgxarmon ancharmon ἀnwferῆ tὴn aἰxmhn ἔxwn Ibyc Stes having upwards the point of a spear kἄ Crasis kai and together simultaneously ano up anochmon hortatory password karabos karabos Macedonian gate door Cf karphos any small dry body piece of wood Hes Attic meat roasted over coals Attic karabos stag beetle crayfish light ship hence modern Greek karabi karavi the worms in dry wood Attic stag beetle horned beetle crayfish a sea creature Attic crayfish prickly crustacean stag beetle karpaia karpaia Thessalo Macedonian mimic military dance see also Carpaea Homeric karpalimos swift for foot eager ravenous kikeῤῥoi kikerroi chick peas 55 Hes Attic ὦxroi ōkhroi PIE k ik er pea LSJ kikeros land crocodile kommarai kommarai or komarai crawfishes Attic karides LSJ kammaros a kind of lobster Epicharmus 60 Sophron 26 Rhinthon 18 also kammaris idos Galen 6 735 komaris a fish Epicharmus 47 komboi komboi molars Attic gomfioi gomphioi dim of gomfos gomphos a large wedge shaped bolt or nail any bond or fastening PIE gombh kynoῦpes kynoupes or kynoutos bear Hesychius kynoupeus knoupeus knopeus kunopes dog faced knops beast esp serpent instead of kinopeton blind acc Zonar from knephas dark if kynoutos knodes knodalon beast lakedama lakedama ὕdwr ἁlmyrὸn ἄliki ἐpikexymenon salty water with alix rice wheat or fish sauce Cf skorodalme sauce or pickle composed of brine and garlic According to Albrecht von Blumenthal 30 ama corresponds to Attic ἁlmyros halmuros salty Cretan Doric hauma for Attic halme laked is cognate to Proto Germanic lauka 56 leek possibly related is Lakedaimwn Laked aimōn the name of the Spartan land leibh8ron leibethron stream Hes Attic ῥeῖ8ron rheithron also libadion libadion a small stream dim of libas libas PIE lei to flow typical Greek productive suffix 8ron thron Macedonian toponym Pierian Leibethra place tomb of Orpheus mattyhs mattues kind of bird mattyh mattue a meat dessert of Macedonian or Thessalian origin verb mattuazo to prepare the mattue Athenaeus 57 paraos paraos eagle or kind of eagle Attic aetos Pamphylian aibetos PIE por going passage awi bird Greek para beside Hes aos wind It may exist as food in Lopado pterygon peripeteia peripeteia or peritia peritia Macedonian festival in month Peritios Hesychius text peri pe t e ia ῥamata rhamata bunch of grapes Ionic rhagmata rhages Koine rhogmata rhoges rhax rhox ῥoῦto rhouto this neut Attic toῦto touto tagonaga tagonaga Macedonian institution administration Thessalian tagὸs tagos commander ἄgw ago lead Other sources Edit aἰgipops aigipops eagle EM 28 19 error for argipous maybe goat eater aix aigos pepsis digestion Cf eagle chelonophagos turtle eater 58 ἀrgyrὰspides argyraspides wiki Argyraspides chrysaspides and chalkaspides golden and bronze shielded 59 dramis dramis a Macedonian bread Thessalian bread daratos Athamanian bread dramix Athenaeus 60 kaysia kausia felt hat used by Macedonians forming part of the regalia of the kings koῖos koios number Athenaeus 61 when talking about Koios the Titan of intelligence and the Macedonians use koios as synonymous with arithmos LSJ koeo mark perceive hear koiazo pledge Hes compose s v koiason syn8es Laocoon thyoskoos observer of sacrifices akouo hear All from PIE root keu 62 to notice observe feel to hear pezetairoi pezetairoi wiki Pezhetairoi Hetairidia Macedonian religious festival Attic pezoi pezomaxoi Aeolic pesdoi 63 Pydna Pudna Pydna toponym Pokorny 64 Attic py8mhn puthmen bottom sole base of a vessel PIE bʰudʰna Attic pynda3 pyndax bottom of vessel Cretan Pytna 65 Hierapytna Sacred Pytna 66 sigynos sigynos spear Cypriotic sigynon Illyrian sibyne Origin Illyrian acc to Fest p 453 L citing Ennius Cyprian acc to Herodotus and Aristotle 67 Il cc Scythian acc to Sch Par A R 4 320 cf 111 sfyraina sphuraina hammer fish sphyraena Strattis Makedones fr 28 Attic kestra kestra cestra needle fish modern Greek fish sfyrida sfyrida ὐeths uetes of the same year Marsyas Attic autoetes Poetic oietes xarwn charon lion Attic Poetic fierce for lion eagle instead of charopos charops bright eyed 68 Proposed Edit A number of Hesychius words are listed orphan some of them have been proposed as Macedonian 69 ἀgerda agerda wild pear tree Attic ἄxerdos acherdos ἀdalos adalos charcoal dust Attic aἴ8alos aithalos ἄsbolos asbolos ἄddee addee imp hurry up ἐpeigoy Attic thee of theo run ἄdis adis hearth Hes ἐsxara eskhara LSJ Attic aἶ8os aithos fire burning heat aἰdῶssa aidossa Attic aithousa portico corridor verandah a loggia leading from aule yard to prodomos baskioi baskioi fasces Hes Attic desmoὶ frῡganwn desmoi phruganōn Pokorny baskeytai baskeutai Attic faskides phaskides Attic faskwlos phaskōlos leather sack PIE bʰasko bi3 bix sphinx Boeotian phix Attic sphinx dalagxa dalancha sea Attic thalatta Ionic thalassa dedalai dedalai package bundle Attic dethla desmai ἐskorodos eskorodos tenon Attic tormos skor8os skorthos tornos slice lathe Eὐdalagῖnes Eudalagines Graces Xarites Attic Eὐ8algῖnes Euthalgines kanadoi kanadoi jaws nom pl Attic gna8oi gnathoi PIE genu jaw Laconian kanadoka kanadoka notch V of an arrow xhlὴ ὀistoῦ laiba laiba shield Doric laia laia laῖfa laipha Attic aspis lalabis lalabis storm Attic lailaps ὁmodalion homodalion isoetes plant 8allw thallo bloom ῥoybotos rhoubotos potion Attic rhophema rhopheo suck absorb rhoibdeo suck with noise Macedonian in Classical sources EditFurther information Greek historiography Among the references that have been discussed as possibly bearing some witness to the linguistic situation in Macedonia there is a sentence from a fragmentary dialogue apparently between an Athenian and a Macedonian in an extant fragment of the 5th century BC comedy Macedonians by the Athenian poet Strattis fr 28 where a stranger is portrayed as speaking in a rural Greek dialect His language contains expressions such as ὕmmes ὡttikoi for ὑmeὶs ἀttikoi you Athenians ὕmmes being also attested in Homer Sappho Lesbian and Theocritus Doric while ὡttikoi appears only in funny country bumpkin contexts of Attic comedy 70 Another text that has been quoted as evidence is a passage from Livy lived 59 BC 14 AD in his Ab urbe condita 31 29 Describing political negotiations between Macedonians and Aetolians in the late 3rd century BC Livy has a Macedonian ambassador argue that Aetolians Acarnanians and Macedonians were men of the same language 71 This has been interpreted as referring to a shared North West Greek speech as opposed to Attic Koine 72 In another passage Livy states that an announcement was translated from Latin to Greek for Macedonians to understand 73 Quintus Curtius Rufus Philotas s trial 74 and the statement that the Greek speaking Branchidae had common language with the Macedonians 75 Over time Macedonian makedonikos when referring to language and related expressions such as makedonizein to speak in the Macedonian fashion acquired the meaning of Koine Greek 76 Contributions to the Koine EditFurther information Ancient Macedonians As a consequence of the Macedonians role in the formation of the Koine Macedonian contributed considerable elements unsurprisingly including some military terminology dimoiriths ta3iarxos ὑpaspistai etc Among the many contributions were the general use of the first declension grammar for male and female nouns with an as ending attested in the genitive of Macedonian coinage from the early 4th century BC of Amyntas III AMYNTA in the genitive the Attic form that fell into disuse would be AMYNTOY There were changes in verb conjugation such as in the Imperative de3a attested in Macedonian sling stones found in Asiatic battlefields that became adopted in place of the Attic forms Koine Greek established a spirantisation of beta gamma and delta which has been attributed to the Macedonian influence 77 See also EditAmerias Ancient Greece Ancient Greek Ancient Greek dialects Government of Macedonia ancient kingdom Hellenic languages History of Macedonia ancient kingdom Macedon Phrygian language Proto Greek language Thracian languageNotes Edit The Oxford English Dictionary 1989 Macedonian Simpson J A amp Weiner E S C eds Oxford Oxford University Press Vol IX ISBN 0 19 861186 2 set ISBN 0 19 861221 4 vol IX p 153 Webster s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged 1976 Macedonian USA Merriam Webster G amp C Merriam Co vol II H R ISBN 0 87779 101 5References Edit Macedonian at MultiTree on the Linguist List B Joseph 2001 Ancient Greek In J Garry et al eds Facts about the World s Major Languages An Encyclopedia of the World s Major Languages Past and Present Blazek Vaclav 2005 Paleo Balkanian Languages I Hellenic Languages Studia Minora Facultatis Philosophicae Universitatis Brunensis 10 pp 15 34 Borza Eugene N 28 September 1992 1990 Who Were the Macedonians In the Shadow of Olympus The Emergence of Macedon Princeton University Press published 1992 p 94 ISBN 978 0 691 00880 6 One can only speculate that that Ancient Macedonian dialect declined with the rise in use of standard koine Greek The main language of formal discourse and official communication became Greek by the fourth century BC Whether the dialect s were eventually replaced by standard Greek or were preserved as part of a two tiered system of speech one for official use the other idiomatic for traditional ceremonies rituals or rough soldiers talk is problematic and requires more evidence and further study Engels Johannes 2010 Macedonians and Greeks In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Wiley Blackwell p 94 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 However with respect to the discussion in this chapter it seems to be quite clear that a ancient Macedonian at some date during the Hellenistic or Roman imperial era was completely replaced by koine Greek and died out and b that ancient Macedonian has no relationship with modern Macedonian which together with Bulgarian belongs to the eastern branch of southern Slavonic languages Joseph Roisman Ian Worthington 7 July 2011 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia John Wiley amp Sons p 94 ISBN 978 1 4443 5163 7 Many surviving public and private inscriptions indicate that in the Macedonian kingdom there was no dominant written language but standard Attic and later on koine Greek Lewis D M Boardman John 2000 The Cambridge ancient history 3rd edition Volume VI Cambridge University Press p 730 ISBN 978 0 521 23348 4 Sarah B Pomeroy Stanley M Burstein Walter Donlan Jennifer Tolbert Roberts A Brief History of Ancient Greece Politics Society and Culture Oxford University Press 2008 p 289 a b Crespo Emilio 2017 The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 329 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 Hornblower Simon 2002 Macedon Thessaly and Boiotia The Greek World 479 323 BC Third ed Routledge p 90 ISBN 0 415 16326 9 a b c Joseph Brian D 2001 Ancient Greek In Garry Jane Rubino Carl Bodomo Adams B Faber Alice French Robert eds Facts about the World s Languages An Encyclopedia of the World s Major Languages Past and Present H W Wilson Company p 256 ISBN 9780824209704 Family Ancient Greek is generally taken to be the only representative though note the existence of different dialects of the Greek or Hellenic branch of Indo European There is some dispute as to whether Ancient Macedonian the native language of Philip and Alexander if it has any special affinity to Greek at all is a dialect within Greek or a sibling language to all of the known Ancient Greek dialects If the latter view is correct then Macedonian and Greek would be the two subbranches of a group within Indo European which could more properly be called Hellenic Related Languages As noted above Ancient Macedonian might be the language most closely related to Greek perhaps even a dialect of Greek The slender evidence is open to different interpretations so that no definitive answer is really possible but most likely Ancient Macedonian was not simply an Ancient Greek dialect on a par with Attic or Aeolic J P Mallory amp D Q Adams Encyclopedia of Indo European culture Chicago London Fitzroy Dearborn pp 361 ISBN 1 884964 98 2 Mallory J P 1997 Mallory J P Adams D Q eds Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Chicago London Fitzroy Dearborn p 361 ISBN 1 884964 98 2 Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2017 Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect Consolidation and New Perspectives In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 299 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 a b Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2020 The speech of the ancient Macedonians Ancient Macedonia De Gruyter pp 64 77 ISBN 978 3 11 071876 8 a b c Masson Olivier 2003 Ancient Macedonian language In Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary revised 3rd ed Oxford University Press pp 905 906 ISBN 978 0 19 860641 3 Michael Meier Brugger Indo European linguistics Walter de Gruyter 2003 p 28 on Google books Roisman Worthington 2010 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Chapter 5 Johannes Engels Macedonians and Greeks p 95 This i e Pella curse tablet has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect Dosuna J Mendez 2012 Ancient Macedonian as a Greek dialect A critical survey on recent work Greek English French German text In Giannakis Georgios K ed Ancient Macedonia Language History Culture Centre for Greek Language p 145 ISBN 978 960 7779 52 6 Babiniotis Georgios 2014 Ancient Macedonian A case study Macedonian Studies Journal Australia 1 1 7 On all levels phonological grammatical and lexical common structural features of Macedonian and Doric lead us to classify Macedonian within the Doric especially the Northwestern group of Doric dialects Matzinger Joachim 2016 Die Altbalkanischen Sprachen PDF Speech in German Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich Brixhe Claude 2018 Macedonian In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthias eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Vol 3 De Gruyter pp 1862 1867 ISBN 978 3 11 054243 1 Hammond N G L 1997 Collected Studies Further studies on various topics A M Hakkert p 79 Worthington Ian 2012 Alexander the Great A Reader Routledge p 71 ISBN 978 1 136 64003 2 Vladimir Georgiev The Genesis of the Balkan Peoples The Slavonic and East European Review 44 103 285 297 July 1966 Ancient Macedonian is closely related to Greek and Macedonian and Greek are descended from a common Greek Macedonian idiom that was spoken till about the second half of the 3rd millennium BC From the 4th century BC on began the Hellenization of ancient Macedonian Eric Hamp amp Douglas Adams 2013 The Expansion of the Indo European Languages Sino Platonic Papers vol 239 Exceptions to the rule ἀrfys arhphys Macedonian Attic ἁrpedwn harpedon cord yarn bagaron bagaron Attic xliaron chliaron warm cf Attic phogo roast Laconian bwnhma bonema speech Homeric Ionic eirema eireo cf Attic phonema sound speech Laconian keblὴ keble Callimachus Fr 140 Macedonian keb a lh keb a le versus Attic kefalh kephale head keblhpyris keblepyris red cap bird Aristophanes Birds keblhgonos keblegonos born from the head Euphorion 108 for Athena with its seed in its head Nicander Alexipharmaca 433 pexari pechari deer Laconian berkios Amerias Ὑperberetos Hyperberetos Cretan month June Macedonian September Hyperberetaios Hellenic Calendars Attic hyperpheretes supreme hyperphero transfer excel Greek Questions 292e Question 9 Why do Delphians call one of their months Bysios 1 Cesko jihoslovenska revue Volume 4 1934 p 187 a b Albrecht von Blumenthal Hesychstudien Stuttgart 1930 21 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott An Intermediate Greek English Lexicon keblhpyris Perseus tufts edu Retrieved on 2013 07 21 Crespo Emilio 2017 The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 344 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 Olivier Masson Sur la notation occasionnelle du digamma grec par d autres consonnes et la glose macedonienne abroutes Bulletin de la Societe de linguistique de Paris 90 1995 231 239 Also proposed by O Hoffmann and J Kalleris a b A history of ancient Greek from the beginnings to late antiquity Maria Chrite Maria Arapopoulou Cambridge University Press 2007 p 439 441 a b Packard Institute epigraphic database http epigraphy packhum org inscriptions main Archived 2007 11 21 at the Wayback Machine Eric Lhote 2006 Les lamelles Oraculaires de Dodone Droz Geneve Roberts E S An Introduction to Greek Epigraphy vol 1 no 237 Greek Personal Names Their Value as Evidence Elaine Matthews Simon Hornblower Peter Marshall Fraser British Academy Oxford University Press 2000 p 103 a b Engels Johannes 2011 Macedonians and Greeks In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4443 5163 7 a b c Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2020 Ancient Macedonia Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG p 78 ISBN 978 3 11 071876 8 Athens bottom IG I 89 Kalindoia Meletemata 11 K31 Pydna SEG 52 617 I 6 till SEG 52 617 VI Mygdonia SEG 49 750 Greek Personal Names Their Value as Evidence 2 by Simon Hornblower Elaine Matthews SEG 49 750 Oraiokastro Defixio Classical period Brill Reference a b Anson Edward M 2010 Why Study Ancient Macedonia and What This Companion is About In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester amp Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 17 n 57 n 58 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 but we may tentatively conclude that Macedonian is a dialect related to North West Greek Olivier Masson French linguist Oxford Classical Dictionary Macedonian Language 1996 J P Mallory amp D Q Adams Encyclopedia of Indo European culture Chicago London Fitzroy Dearborn pp 361 ISBN 1 884964 98 2 Les anciens Macedoniens Etude linguistique et historique by J N Kalleris Online Etymology Dictionary Etymonline com Retrieved 2013 02 03 ARAE Greek goddesses or spirits of curses mythology ARAI Theoi com Retrieved 2013 02 03 Pokorny 1967 03 27 Retrieved 2013 02 03 Dindorf Wilhelm 1841 Poetae scenici graeci accedunt perditarum fabularum fragmenta Retrieved 2013 02 03 Pokorny Query madh Ehl santafe edu Archived from the original on 2012 08 20 Retrieved 2013 02 03 Pokorny s Dictionary Starling rinet ru Retrieved 2013 02 03 Izela Die Makedonen Ihre Sprache und Ihr Volkstum 3 by Otto Hoffmann Aleksandar Mikic Origin of the Words Denoting Some of the Most Ancient Old World Pulse Crops and Their Diversity in Modern European Languages 2012 4 Online Etymology Dictionary Etymonline com Retrieved 2013 02 03 Deipnosophists 14 663 4 pp 1059 1062 Digicoll library wisc edu Retrieved 2013 02 03 Kalleris p 238 240 Kalleris p 108 Athenaeus Deipnosophists 3 114b Deipnosophists 10 455e Pokorny 5 permanent dead link Gerhard Kobler Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 10 03 Retrieved 2008 03 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Kalleris p 172 179 242 Pokorny Pudna Retrieved 2013 02 03 Zeitschrift der Deutschen morgenlandischen Gesellschaft Kommissionsverlag F Steiner 1854 p 227 Retrieved 2013 02 03 via Internet Archive pytna pydna Skeat Theodore Cressy 1994 06 13 The Dorians in Archaeology by Theodore Cressy Skeat Retrieved 2013 02 03 Poetics Aristotle XXI 6 Kalleris p 274 Hoffmann Otto 1906 Otto Hoffmann p 270 bottom ISBN 9783487405339 Retrieved 2013 02 03 Steven Colvin Dialect in Aristophanes and the politics of language in Ancient Greek Oxford Oxford University Press 1999 p 279 Livy The History of Rome 31 29 15 on Perseus A Panayotou The position of the Macedonian dialect In Maria Arapopoulou Maria Chrite Anastasios Phoivos Christides eds A History of Ancient Greek From the Beginnings to Late Antiquity Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2007 pp 433 458 Google Books Livy The History of Rome 45 29 on Perseus E Kapetanopoulos Alexander s Patrius Sermo in the Philotas Affair The Ancient World 30 1999 pp 117 128 PDF or HTM Quintus Curtius Rufus Historiae Alexandri Magni VII 5 33 Loeb edition Latin John C Rolfe English translation C Brixhe A Panayotou 1994 Le Macedonien in Langues indo europeennes p 208 George Babiniotis 1992 The question of mediae in ancient Macedonian Greek reconsidered In Historical Philology Greek Latin and Romance Bela Brogyanyi Reiner Lipp 1992 John Benjamins Publishing Further reading EditBrixhe Claude amp Anna Panayotou Le Macedonien Langues indo europeennes ed Francoise Bader Paris CNRS 1994 pp 205 220 ISBN 2 271 05043 X Chadwick John The Prehistory of the Greek Language Cambridge 1963 Crossland R A The Language of the Macedonians Cambridge Ancient History vol 3 part 1 Cambridge 1982 Hammond Nicholas G L Literary Evidence for Macedonian Speech Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte Vol 43 No 2 1994 pp 131 142 Hatzopoulos M B Le Macedonien Nouvelles donnees et theories nouvelles Ancient Macedonia Sixth International Symposium vol 1 Institute for Balkan Studies 1999 Ilievski Petar Hristov de Position of the Ancient Macedonian Language and the Name of the Contemporary Makedonski In Studia Minora Facultatis Philosophicae Universitatis Brunensis Brown University E36 1991 pp 129 140 Kalleris Jean Les Anciens Macedoniens etude linguistique et historique Athens Institut francais d Athenes 1988 Katicic Radoslav Ancient Languages of the Balkans The Hague Paris Mouton 1976 Neroznak V Paleo Balkan languages Moscow 1978 Rhomiopoulou Katerina An Outline of Macedonian History and Art Greek Ministry of Culture and Science 1980 Casule Ilija mk The Etymology and Correlation of the Ancient Macedonian Gloss lakedama and Phrygian lakedokey In Ziva Antika Antiquite Vivante 71 2021 19 26 DOI https www doi org 10 47054 ZIVA21711 2019ch Die Makedonen Ihre Sprache und ihr Volkstum by Otto HoffmannExternal links EditAncient Macedonian as a Greek dialect A critical survey on recent work Greek English French German text The speech of the ancient Macedonians in the light of recent epigraphic discoveries Jona Lendering Ancient Macedonia web page on livius org Greek Inscriptions from ancient Macedonia Epigraphical Database Heinrich Tischner on Hesychius words Archived 2010 11 27 at the Wayback Machine www sil org ISO639 3 entry for Ancient Macedonian XMK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ancient Macedonian language amp oldid 1128080296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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