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Doric Greek

Doric or Dorian (Ancient Greek: Δωρισμός, romanizedDōrismós), also known as West Greek, was a group of Ancient Greek dialects; its varieties are divided into the Doric proper and Northwest Doric subgroups. Doric was spoken in a vast area, that included northern Greece (Acarnania, Aetolia, Epirus, western and eastern Locris, Phocis, Doris, and possibly ancient Macedonia), most of the Peloponnese (Achaea, Elis, Messenia, Laconia, Argolid, Aegina, Corinth, and Megara), the southern Aegean (Kythira, Milos, Thera, Crete, Karpathos, and Rhodes), as well as the colonies of some of the aforementioned regions, in Cyrene, Magna Graecia, the Black Sea, the Ionian Sea and the Adriatic Sea. It was also spoken in the Greek sanctuaries of Dodona, Delphi, and Olympia, as well as at the four Panhellenic festivals; the Isthmian, Nemean, Pythian, and Olympic Games.[2][3][4]

Doric Greek
RegionAcarnania, Aetolia, Epirus, western and eastern Locris, Phocis, Doris, Achaea, Elis, Messenia, Laconia, Argolid, Aegina, Corinth, Megara, Kythira, Milos, Thera, Crete, Karpathos, Rhodes, and possibly ancient Macedonia
Also, colonies of the aforementioned regions in Cyrene, Magna Graecia, Black Sea, Ionian Sea and Adriatic Sea
Erac. 800–100 BC; evolved into the Tsakonian language
Early form
Dialects
  • Doric proper:
  • Laconian
  • Argolic
  • Corinthian
  • Northwest Doric:
  • Phocian
  • Locrian
  • Elean
  • Epirote
  • (?) Ancient Macedonian
  • Achaean Doric
  • Achaean Doric koine
  • Northwest Doric koine
Greek alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-3
grc-dor
Glottologdori1248
Distribution of Greek dialects in Greece in the classical period.[1]
Distribution of Greek dialects in Magna Graecia (Southern Italy and Sicily) in the classical period.

By Hellenistic times, under the Achaean League, an Achaean Doric koine appeared, exhibiting many peculiarities common to all Doric dialects, which delayed the spread of the Attic-based Koine Greek to the Peloponnese until the 2nd century BC.[5] The only living descendant of Doric is the Tsakonian language which is still spoken in Greece today;[6] though critically endangered, with only a few hundred – mostly elderly – fluent speakers left.[7]

It is widely accepted that Doric originated in the mountains of Epirus in northwestern Greece, the original seat of the Dorians. It was expanded to all other regions during the Dorian invasion (c. 1150 BC) and the colonisations that followed. The presence of a Doric state (Doris) in central Greece, north of the Gulf of Corinth, led to the theory that Doric had originated in northwest Greece or maybe beyond in the Balkans. The dialect's distribution towards the north extends to the Megarian colony of Byzantium and the Corinthian colonies of Potidaea, Epidamnos, Apollonia and Ambracia; there, it further added words to what would become the Albanian language,[8][9] probably via traders from a now-extinct Illyrian intermediary.[10] In the north, local epigraphical evidence includes the decrees of the Epirote League, the Pella curse tablet, three additional lesser known Macedonian inscriptions (all of them identifiable as Doric),[11] numerous inscriptions from a number of Greek colonies. Furthermore, there is an abundance of place names used to examine features of the northern Doric dialects. Southern dialects, in addition to numerous inscriptions, coins, and names, have also provided much more literary evidence through authors such as Alcman, Pindar, and Archimedes of Syracuse, among others, all of whom wrote in Doric. There are also ancient dictionaries that have survived; notably the one by Hesychius of Alexandria, whose work preserved many dialectal words from throughout the Greek-speaking world.

Variants

Doric proper

 
Doric Greek dialects

Where the Doric dialect group fits in the overall classification of ancient Greek dialects depends to some extent on the classification. Several views are stated under Greek dialects. The prevalent theme of most views listed there is that Doric is a subgroup of West Greek. Some use the terms Northern Greek or Northwest Greek instead. The geographic distinction is only verbal and ostensibly is misnamed: all of Doric was spoken south of "Southern Greek" or "Southeastern Greek."

Be that as it may, "Northern Greek" is based on a presumption that Dorians came from the north and on the fact that Doric is closely related to Northwest Greek. When the distinction began is not known. All the "northerners" might have spoken one dialect at the time of the Dorian invasion; certainly, Doric could only have further differentiated into its classical dialects when the Dorians were in place in the south. Thus West Greek is the most accurate name for the classical dialects.

Tsakonian, a descendant of Laconian Doric (Spartan), is still spoken on the southern Argolid coast of the Peloponnese, in the modern prefectures of Arcadia and Laconia. Today it is a source of considerable interest to linguists, and an endangered dialect.

Laconian

 
Laconia in Greece
 
Argolis in Greece

Laconian was spoken by the population of Laconia in the southern Peloponnese and also by its colonies, Taras and Herakleia in Magna Graecia. Sparta was the seat of ancient Laconia.

Laconian is attested in inscriptions on pottery and stone from the seventh century BC. A dedication to Helen dates from the second quarter of the seventh century. Taras was founded in 706 and its founders must already have spoken Laconic.

Many documents from the state of Sparta survive, whose citizens called themselves Lacedaemonians after the name of the valley in which they lived. Homer calls it "hollow Lacedaemon", though he refers to a pre-Dorian period. The seventh century Spartan poet Alcman used a dialect that some consider to be predominantly Laconian. Philoxenus of Alexandria wrote a treatise On the Laconian dialect.

Argolic

Argolic was spoken in the thickly settled northeast Peloponnese at, for example, Argos, Mycenae, Hermione, Troezen, Epidaurus, and as close to Athens as the island of Aegina. As Mycenaean Greek had been spoken in this dialect region in the Bronze Age, it is clear that the Dorians overran it but were unable to take Attica. The Dorians went on from Argos to Crete and Rhodes.

Ample inscriptional material of a legal, political and religious content exists from at least the sixth century BC.

Corinthian

 
Corinthia in Greece

Corinthian was spoken first in the isthmus region between the Peloponnesus and mainland Greece; that is, the Isthmus of Corinth. The cities and states of the Corinthian dialect region were Corinth, Sicyon, Archaies Kleones, Phlius, the colonies of Corinth in western Greece: Corcyra, Leucas, Anactorium, Ambracia and others, the colonies in and around Italy: Syracuse, Sicily and Ancona, and the colonies of Corcyra: Dyrrachium, and Apollonia. The at Corinth date from the early sixth century BC. They use a Corinthian epichoric alphabet. (See under Attic Greek.)

Corinth contradicts the prejudice that Dorians were rustic militarists, as some consider the speakers of Laconian to be. Positioned on an international trade route, Corinth played a leading part in the re-civilizing of Greece after the centuries of disorder and isolation following the collapse of Mycenaean Greece.

Northwest Doric

The Northwest Doric (or "Northwest Greek", with "Northwest Doric" now considered more accurate so as not to distance the group from Doric proper) group is closely related to Doric proper, while sometimes there is no distinction between Doric and the Northwest Doric.[12] Whether it is to be considered a part of the southern Doric Group or the latter a part of it or the two considered subgroups of West Greek, the dialects and their grouping remain the same. West Thessalian and Boeotian had come under a strong Northwest Doric influence.

While Northwest Doric is generally seen as a dialectal group,[12] dissenting views exist, such as that of Méndez-Dosuna, who argues that Northwest Doric is not a proper dialectal group but rather merely a case of areal dialectal convergence.[13] Throughout the Northwest Doric area, most internal differences did not hinder mutual understanding, though Filos, citing Bubenik, notes that there were certain cases where a bit of accommodation may have been necessary.[14]

The earliest epigraphic texts for Northwest Doric date to the 6th–5th century BC.[12] These are thought to provide evidence for Northwest Doric features, especially the phonology and morphophonology, but most of the features thus attributed to Northwest Doric are not exclusive to it.[12] The Northwest Doric dialects differ from the main Doric Group dialects in the below features:[15]

  1. Dative plural of the third declension in -οις (-ois) (instead of -σι (-si)): Ἀκαρνάνοις ἱππέοις Akarnanois hippeois for Ἀκαρνᾶσιν ἱππεῦσιν Akarnasin hippeusin (to the Acarnanian knights).
  2. ἐν (en) + accusative (instead of εἰς (eis)): en Naupakton (into Naupactus).
  3. -στ (-st) for -σθ (-sth): γενέσται genestai for genesthai (to become), μίστωμα mistôma for misthôma (payment for hiring).
  4. ar for er: amara /Dor. amera/Att. hêmera (day), Elean wargon for Doric wergon and Attic ergon (work)
  5. Dative singular in -oi instead of -ôi: τοῖ Ἀσκλαπιοῖ, Doric τῷ Ἀσκλαπιῷ, Attic Ἀσκληπιῷ (to Asclepius)
  6. Middle participle in -eimenos instead of -oumenos

Four or five dialects of Northwestern Doric are recognised.

Phocian

This dialect was spoken in Phocis and in its main settlement, Delphi. Because of that it is also cited as Delphian.[citation needed] Plutarch says that Delphians pronounce b in the place of p (βικρὸν for πικρὸν)[16]

Locrian

Locrian Greek is attested in two locations:

Elean

The dialect of Elis (earliest c. 600 BC)[18] is considered, after Aeolic Greek, one of the most difficult for the modern reader of epigraphic texts.[19]

Epirote

Spoken at the Dodona oracle, (earliest c. 550–500 BC)[20] firstly under control of the Thesprotians;[21] later organized in the Epirote League (since c. 370 BC).[22]

Ancient Macedonian

Most scholars maintain that ancient Macedonian was a Greek dialect,[23] probably of the Northwestern Doric group in particular.[24][25][26] Olivier Masson, in his article for The Oxford Classical Dictionary, talks of "two schools of thought": one rejecting "the Greek affiliation of Macedonian" and preferring "to treat it as an Indo-European language of the Balkans" of contested affiliation (examples are Bonfante 1987, and Russu 1938); the other favouring "a purely Greek nature of Macedonian as a northern Greek dialect" with numerous adherents from the 19th century and on (Fick 1874; Hoffmann 1906; Hatzidakis 1897 etc.; Kalleris 1964 and 1976).[27]

Masson himself argues with the largely Greek character of the Macedonian onomastics and sees Macedonian as "a Greek dialect, characterised by its marginal position and by local pronunciations" and probably most closely related to the dialects of the Greek North-West (Locrian, Aetolian, Phocidian, Epirote). Brian D. Joseph acknowledges the closeness of Macedonian to Greek (even contemplating to group them into a "Hellenic branch" of Indo-European), but retains that "[t]he slender evidence is open to different interpretations, so that no definitive answer is really possible".[28] Johannes Engels has pointed to the Pella curse tablet, written in Doric Greek: "This has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north-western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect".[29] Miltiades Hatzopoulos has suggested that the Macedonian dialect of the 4th century BC, as attested in the Pella curse tablet, was a sort of Macedonian ‘koine’ resulting from the encounter of the idiom of the ‘Aeolic’-speaking populations around Mount Olympus and the Pierian Mountains with the Northwest Greek-speaking Argead Macedonians hailing from Argos Orestikon, who founded the kingdom of Lower Macedonia.[30] However, according to Hatzopoulos, B. Helly expanded and improved his own earlier suggestion and presented the hypothesis of a (North-)‘Achaean’ substratum extending as far north as the head of the Thermaic Gulf, which had a continuous relation, in prehistoric times both in Thessaly and Macedonia, with the Northwest Greek-speaking populations living on the other side of the Pindus mountain range, and contacts became cohabitation when the Argead Macedonians completed their wandering from Orestis to Lower Macedonia in the 7th c. BC.[30] According to this hypothesis, Hatzopoulos concludes that the Macedonian Greek dialect of the historical period, which is attested in inscriptions, is a sort of koine resulting from the interaction and the influences of various elements, the most important of which are the North-Achaean substratum, the Northwest Greek idiom of the Argead Macedonians, and the Thracian and Phrygian adstrata.[30]

Achaean Doric

Achaean Doric most probably belonged to the Northwest Doric group.[31] It was spoken in Achaea in the northwestern Peloponnese, on the islands of Cephalonia and Zakynthos in the Ionian Sea, and in the Achaean colonies of Magna Graecia in Southern Italy (including Sybaris and Crotone). This strict Doric dialect was later subject to the influence of mild Doric spoken in Corinthia. It survived until 350 BC.[32]

Achaean Doric koine

By Hellenistic times, under the Achaean League, an Achaean Doric koine appeared, exhibiting many peculiarities common to all Doric dialects, which delayed the spread of the Attic-based Koine Greek to the Peloponnese until the 2nd century BC.[5]

Northwest Doric koine

 
Political situation in the Greek world around the time at which the Northwest Doric koine arose

The Northwest Doric koine refers to a supraregional North-West common variety that emerged in the third and second centuries BC, and was used in the official texts of the Aetolian League.[33][34] Such texts have been found in W. Locris, Phocis, and Phtiotis, among other sites.[35] It contained a mix of native Northwest Doric dialectal elements and Attic forms.[36] It was apparently based on the most general features of Northwest Doric, eschewing less common local traits.[34][37]

Its rise was driven by both linguistic and non-linguistic factors, with non-linguistic motivating factors including the spread of the rival Attic-Ionic koine after it was recruited by the Macedonian state for administration, and the political unification of a vast territories by the Aetolian League and the state of Epirus. The Northwest Doric koine was thus both a linguistic and a political rival of the Attic-Ionic koine.[34]

Phonology

Vowels

Long a

Proto-Greek long *ā is retained as ā, in contrast to Attic developing a long open ē (eta) in at least some positions.

  • Doric gā mātēr ~ Attic gē mētēr 'earth mother'

Compensatory lengthening of e and o

In certain Doric dialects (Severe Doric), *e and *o lengthen by compensatory lengthening or contraction to eta or omega, in contrast to Attic ei and ou (spurious diphthongs).

  • Severe Doric ~ Attic -ou (second-declension genitive singular)
  • -ōs ~ -ous (second-declension accusative plural)
  • -ēn ~ -ein (present, second aorist infinitive active)

Contraction of a and e

Contraction: Proto-Greek *ae > Doric ē (eta) ~ Attic ā.

Synizesis

Proto-Greek *eo, *ea > some Doric dialects' io, ia.

Proto-Greek *a

Proto-Greek short *a > Doric short a ~ Attic e in certain words.

  • Doric hiaros, Artamis ~ Attic hieros 'holy', Artemis

Consonants

Proto-Greek *-ti

Proto-Greek *-ti is retained (assibilated to -si in Attic).

  • Doric phāti ~ Attic phēsi 'he says' (3rd sing. pres. of athematic verb)
  • legonti ~ legousi 'they say' (3rd pl. pres. of thematic verb)
  • wīkati ~ eikosi 'twenty'
  • triākatioi ~ triākosioi 'three hundred'

Proto-Greek *ts

Proto-Greek *ts > -ss- between vowels. (Attic shares the same development, but further shortens the geminate to -s-.)

  • Proto-Greek *métsos > Doric messos ~ Attic mesos 'middle' (from Proto-Indo-European *médʰyos, compare Latin medius)

Digamma

Initial *w (ϝ) is preserved in earlier Doric (lost in Attic).

  • Doric woikos ~ Attic oikos 'house' (from Proto-Indo-European *weyḱ-, *woyḱ-, compare Latin vīcus 'village')

Literary texts in Doric and inscriptions from the Hellenistic age have no digamma.

Accentuation

For information on the peculiarities of Doric accentuation, see Ancient Greek accent § Doric.

Morphology

Numeral tetores ~ Attic tettares, Ionic tesseres "four".

Ordinal prātos ~ Attic–Ionic prōtos "first".

Demonstrative pronoun tēnos "this" ~ Attic–Ionic (e)keinos

t for h (from Proto-Indo-European s) in article and demonstrative pronoun.

  • Doric toi, tai; toutoi, tautai
  • ~ Attic-Ionic hoi, hai; houtoi, hautai.

Third person plural, athematic or root aorist -n ~ Attic -san.

  • Doric edon ~ Attic–Ionic edosan

First person plural active -mes ~ Attic–Ionic -men.

Future -se-ō ~ Attic -s-ō.

  • prāxētai (prāk-se-etai) ~ Attic–Ionic prāxetai

Modal particle ka ~ Attic–Ionic an.

  • Doric ai ka, ai de ka, ai tis ka ~ ean, ean de, ean tis

Temporal adverbs in -ka ~ Attic–Ionic -te.

  • hoka, toka

Locative adverbs in -ei ~ Attic/Koine -ou.

  • teide, pei.

Future tense

The aorist and future of verbs in -izō, -azō has x (versus Attic/Koine s).

  • Doric agōnixato ~ Attic agōnisato "he contended"

Similarly k before suffixes beginning with t.

Glossary

Common

  • αἰγάδες aigades (Attic αἶγες aiges) "goats"
  • αἶγες aiges (Attic κύματα kymata) "waves"
  • ἁλία halia (Attic ἐκκλησία ekklēsia) "assembly" (Cf. Heliaia)
  • βρύκαιναι brykainai (Attic ἱέρειαι hiereiai) "priestesses"
  • βρυκετός bryketos (Attic βρυγμός brygmos, βρυκηθμός brykēthmos) "chewing, grinding, gnashing with the teeth"
  • δαμιοργοί damiorgoi (Attic ἄρχοντες archontes) "high officials". Cf. Attic δημιουργός dēmiourgos "public worker for the people (dēmos), craftsman, creator"; Hesychius δαμιουργοί· αἱ πόρναι "prostitutes". Zamiourgoi Elean.
  • Ἐλωός Elôos Hephaestus Ἥφαιστος παρὰ Δωριεῦσιν
  • κάρρων karrōn (Attic κρείττων kreittōn) "stronger" (Ionic kreissōn, Cretan kartōn )
  • κορύγης korygēs (Attic κῆρυξ kēryx) "herald, messenger" (Aeolic karoux)
  • λαιός laios (Homeric, Attic and Modern Greek ἀριστερός aristeros) "left".Cretan: λαία laia, Attic aspis shield, Hesych. λαῖφα laipha λαίβα laiba, because the shield was held with the left hand. Cf.Latin:laevus
  • λαία laia (Attic, Modern Greek λεία leia) "prey"
  • λέω (λείω) le(i)ō (Attic ἐθέλω ethelō) "will"
  • οἴνωτρος oinōtros "vine pole" (: Greek οἶνος oinos "wine"). Cf. Oenotrus
  • μογίοντι mogionti (Ionic πυρέσσουσι pyressousi) "they are on fire, have fever" (= Attic μογοῦσι mogousi "they suffer, take pains to")
  • μυρμηδόνες myrmēdônes (Attic μύρμηκες myrmēkes) "ants". Cf. Myrmidons
  • ὄπτιλλος optillos or optilos 'eye' (Attic ophthalmos) (Latin oculus) (Attic optikos of sight, Optics)
  • πάομαι paomai (Attic κτάομαι ktaomai) "acquire"
  • ῥαπιδοποιός rhapidopoios poet, broiderer, pattern-weaver, boot-maker (rhapis needle for Attic rhaphis)
  • σκανά skana (Attic skênê) tent, stage, scene) (Homeric klisiê) (Doric skanama encampment)
  • τανθαλύζειν tanthalyzein (Attic τρέμειν tremein) "to tremble"
  • τύνη tunē or tounē 'you nominative' (Attic συ) dative τέειν teein (Attic σοί soi)
  • χανάκτιον chanaktion (Attic μωρόν mōron)(chan goose)

Doric proper

Argolic

  • Βαλλακράδες Ballacrades title of Argive athletes on a feast-day (Cf.achras wild pear-tree)[38]
  • Δαυλὶς Daulis mimic festival at Argos (acc. Pausanias 10.4.9 daulis means thicket)[39] (Hes.daulon fire log)
  • δροόν droon strong (Attic ischyron, dynaton)
  • κέστερ kester youngman (Attic neanias)
  • κυλλάραβις kyllarabis discus and gymnasium at Argos
  • σεμαλία semalia ragged, tattered garments Attic rhakē, cf. himatia clothes)
  • ὤβεα ôbea eggs (Attic ὠά ôa )

Cretan

  • ἀγέλα agela "group of boys in the Cretan agōgē". Cf. Homeric Greek ἀγέλη agelē "herd" (Cretan apagelos not yet received in agelê, boy under 17)
  • ἀδνός adnos holy, pure (Attic ἁγνός hagnos) (Ariadne)
  • ἀϝτὸς aWtos (Attic autos) Hsch. aus αὐς - αὐτός. Κρῆτες καὶ Λάκωνες
  • ἄκαρα akaralegs (Attic skelê)
  • ἁμάκις hamakis once (Attic hapax)
  • ἄργετος argetos juniper, cedar (Attic arkeuthos)
  • αὐκά auka power (Attic alkê)
  • ἀφραττίας aphrattias strong
  • βαλικιῶται balikiôtai Koine synepheboi (Attic hêlikiotai 'age-peers' of the same age hêlikia)
  • βριτύ britu sweet (Attic glyku)
  • δαμιόω damioô, Cretan and Boeotian. for Attic zêmioô to damage, punish, harm
  • δαμπόν dampon first milk curdled by heating over embers (Attic puriephthon, puriatê)
  • δῶλα dôla ears (Attic ôta) (Tarentine ata)
  • Ϝέλχανος Welchanos for Cretan Zeus and Welchanios, Belchanios, Gelchanos (Elchanios Cnossian month)
  • ϝεργάδδομαι wergaddomai I work (Attic ergazomai)
  • ϝῆμα Wêma garment (Attic heima) (Aeolic emma) (Koine (h)immation)(Cf.Attic amphi-ennumi I dress, amph-iesis clothing)
  • ἰβῆν ibên wine (Dialectal Ϝοἶνος Woînos Attic oinos) (accusative ἰβῆνα ibêna)
  • ἴττον itton one (Attic hen ἕν)
  • καρανώ karanô goat
  • ϟόσμος kosmos and kormos archontes in Crete, body of kosmoi (Attic κόσμος order, ornament, honour, world - kormos trunk of a tree)
  • κύφερον, κυφή kypheron, kuphê head (Attic kephalê)
  • λάκος lakos rag, tattered garment (Attic rhakos) (Aeolic brakos long robe, lacks the sense 'ragged')
  • μαλκενίς malkenis (Attic parthenos) Hsch: malakinnês.
  • ὄθρυν othrun mountain (Attic oros) (Cf.Othrys)
  • ῥυστόν rhyston spear
  • σεῖφα seipha darkness (Attic zophos, skotia) (Aeolic dnophos)
  • σπεῦσδος speusdos title of Cretan officer (Cf.speudô speus- rush)
  • τάγανα tagana (Attic tauta) these things
  • τίρος tiros summer (Homeric, Attic theros)
  • τρέ tre you, accusative ( Attic se )

Laconian

  • ἀβήρ abêr storeroom οἴκημα στοὰς ἔχον, ταμεῖον Λάκωνες
  • ἀϝώρ awôr dawn (Attic ἠώς êôs) (Latin aurora)
  • ἄδδα adda need, deficiency (Attic endeia) Aristophanes of Byzantium(fr. 33)
  • ἀδδαυόν addauon dry (i.e. azauon) or addanon (Attic xêron)
  • αἴκουδα aikouda (Attic aischunē) αἰσχύνη. Λάκωνες
  • αἵματία haimatia blood-broth, Spartan Melas Zomos Black soup) (haima haimatos blood)
  • ἀΐτας aïtas (Attic ἐρώμενος erōmenos) "beloved boy (in a pederastic relationship)"
  • ἀκκόρ akkor tube, bag (Attic askos)
  • ἀκχαλίβαρ akchalibar bed (Attic skimpous)(Koine krabbatos)
  • ἀμβροτίξας ambrotixas having begun, past participle(amphi or ana..+ ?) (Attic aparxamenos, aparchomai) (Doric -ixas for Attic -isas)
  • ἀμπέσσαι ampesai (Attic amphiesai) to dress
  • ἀπαβοίδωρ apaboidôr out of tune (Attic ekmelôs) (Cf.Homeric singer Aoidos) / emmelôs, aboidôr in tune
  • Ἀπέλλα apella (Attic ἐκκλησία ekklēsia) "assembly in Sparta" (verb apellazein)
  • ἀρβυλίς arbylis (Attic ἀρύβαλλος aryballos) (Hesychius: ἀρβυλίδα λήκυθον. Λάκωνες)
  • ἄττασι attasi wake up, get up (Attic anastêthi)
  • βάβαλον babalon imperative of cry aloud, shout (Attic kraugason)
  • βάγαρον bagaron (Attic χλιαρόν chliaron 'warm') (Cf. Attic φώγω phōgō 'roast') (Laconian word)
  • βαφά bapha broth (Attic zômos) (Attic βαφή baphê dipping of red-hot iron in water (Koine and Modern Greek βαφή vafi dyeing)
  • ϝείκατι weikati twenty (Attic εἴκοσι eikosi)
  • βέλα bela sun and dawn Laconian (Attic helios Cretan abelios)
  • βερνώμεθα bernômetha Attic klêrôsômetha we will cast or obtain by lot (inf. berreai) (Cf.Attic meiresthai receive portion, Doric bebramena for heimarmenê, allotted by Moirai)
  • βέσκερος beskeros bread (Attic artos)
  • βήλημα bêlêma hindrance, river dam (Laconian)
  • βηρίχαλκον bêrichalkon fennel (Attic marathos) (chalkos bronze)
  • βίβασις bibasis Spartan dance for boys and girls
  • βίδυοι bidyoi bideoi, bidiaioi also "officers in charge of the ephebes at Sparta"
  • βίὡρ biôr almost, maybe (Attic ἴσως isôs, σχεδόν schedon) wihôr (ϝίὡρ)
  • βλαγίς blagis spot (Attic kêlis)
  • βοῦα boua "group of boys in the Spartan agōgē"
  • βο(υ)αγός bo(u)agos "leader of a boua at Sparta"
  • βυλλίχης bullichês Laconian dancer (Attic orchêstês)
  • βώνημα bônêma speech (Homeric, Ionic eirêma eireo) (Cf.Attic phônêma sound, speech)
  • γαβεργόρ gabergor labourer (ga earth wergon work) (Cf.geôrgos farmer)
  • γαιάδας gaiadas citizens, people (Attic dêmos)
  • γονάρ gonar mother Laconian (gonades children Eur. Med. 717)
  • δαβελός dabelos torch (Attic dalos)(Syracusan daelos, dawelos)(Modern Greek davlos) (Laconian δαβῇ dabêi (Attic kauthêi) it should be burnt)
  • δίζα diza goat (Attic aix) and Hera aigophagos Goat-eater in Sparta
  • εἴρην eirēn (Attic ἔφηβος ephēbos) "Spartan youth who has completed his 12th year"
  • εἰσπνήλας eispnēlas (Attic ἐραστής erastēs) one who inspires love, a lover (Attic eispneô inhale, breathe)
  • ἐξωβάδια exôbadia (Attic enôtia ; ôta ears)
  • ἔφοροι ephoroi (Attic ἔφοροι ἄρχοντες archontes) "high officials at Sparta". Cf. Attic ἔφορος ephoros "overseer, guardian"
  • Θοράτης Thoratês Apollon thoraios containing the semen, god of growth and increase
  • θρῶναξ thrônax drone (Attic kêphên)
  • κάφα kapha washing, bathing-tub (Attic loutêr) (Cf.skaphê basin, bowl)
  • κελοῖα keloia (kelya, kelea also) "contest for boys and youths at Sparta"
  • κίρα kirafox (Attic alôpêx) (Hsch kiraphos).
  • μεσόδμα mesodma, messodoma woman and ἀνθρωπώ anthrôpô (Attic gunê)
  • μυρταλίς myrtalis Butcher's broom (Attic oxumursinê) (Myrtale real name of Olympias)
  • πάσορ pasor passion (Attic pathos)
  • πόρ por leg, foot (Attic pous)
  • πούρδαιν pourdain restaurant (Koine mageirion) (Cf.purdalon, purodansion (from pyr fire hence pyre)
  • σαλαβάρ salabar cook (Common Doric/Attic mageiros)
  • σίκα sika 'pig' (Attic hus) and grôna female pig.
  • σιρία siria safeness (Attic asphaleia)
  • ψιθωμίας psithômias ill, sick (Attic asthenês) Λάκωνες τὸν ἀσθενῆ
  • ψιλάκερ psilaker first dancer
  • ὠβά ôba (Attic κώμη kōmē) "village; one of five quarters of the city of Sparta"

Magna Graecia's Doric

  • ἀστύξενοι astyxenoi Metics, Tarentine
  • βάννας bannas king basileus, wanax, anax[40]
  • βειλαρμοσταὶ beilarmostai cavalry officers Tarentine (Attic ilarchai) (ilē, squadron + Laconian harmost-)
  • δόστορε dostore 'you make' Tarentine (Attic ποιεῖτε)
  • Θαύλια Thaulia "festival of Tarentum", θαυλακίζειν thaulakizein 'to demand sth with uproar' Tarentine, θαυλίζειν thaulizein "to celebrate like Dorians", Θαῦλος Thaulos "Macedonian Ares", Thessalian Ζεὺς Θαύλιος Zeus Thaulios, Athenian Ζεὺς Θαύλων Zeus Thaulon, Athenian family Θαυλωνίδαι Thaulonidai
  • ῥάγανον rhaganon easy Thuriian (Attic rhaidion) (Aeolic braidion)
  • σκύτας skytas 'back-side of neck' (Attic trachēlos)
  • τήνης tênês till Tarentine (Attic ἕως heôs)
  • τρυφώματα tryphômata whatever are fed or nursed, children, cattle (Attic thremmata)
  • ὑετίς huetis jug, amphora Tarentine (Attic hydris, hydria)(huetos rain)

North-West

Aetolian-Acarnanian

  • ἀγρίδιον agridion 'village' Aetolian (Attic chôrion)(Hesychius text: *ἀγρίδιον κωμάριον, χωρίον vA [παρὰ Αἰτωλοῖς] dim. of agros countryside, field)
  • ἀερία aeria fog Aetolian (Attic omichlê, aêr air)(Hsch.ἀερία ὀμίχλη, παρὰ Αἰτωλοῖς.)
  • κίββα kibba wallet, bag Aetolian (Attic πήρα pêra) (Cypr. kibisis) (Cf.Attic κιβωτός kibôtos ark kibôtion box Suid. cites kibos)
  • πλήτομον plêtomon Acarnanian old, ancient (Attic palaion,palaiotaton very old)

Delphic-Locrian

  • δείλομαι deilomai will, want Locrian, Delphian(Attic boulomai) (Coan dêlomai) (Doric bôlomai) (Thessalian belloumai)
  • ϝαργάνα Wargana female worker epithet for Athena (Delphic) (Attic Erganê) (Attic ergon work, Doric Wergon, Elean ϝάργον Wargon
  • ϝέρρω Werrô go away Locrian (Attic errô) (Hsch. berrês fugitive, berreuô escape)
  • Ϝεσπάριοι Λοϟροὶ Wesparioi Lokroi Epizephyrian (Western) Locrians (Attic hesperios of evening, western, Doric wesperios) (cf. Latin Vesper)
  • ὀπλίαι opliai places where the Locrians counted their cattle

Elean

  • ἀϝλανέο̄ς aWlaneôs without fraud, honestly IvO7 (Attic adolôs)(Hsch.alanes true)(Tarentinian alaneôs absolutely)
  • ἀμίλλυξ amillux scythe (Attic drepanon) in accus. ἀμίλλυκα (Boeotian amillakas wine)
  • ἀττάμιος attamios unpunished (Attic azêmios) from an earliest addamios (cf.Cretan, Boeotian damioô punish)
  • βάβακοι babakoi cicadas Elean (Attic tettiges) (in Pontus babakoi frogs)
  • βαίδειος baideios ready (Attic hetoimos) (heteos fitness)
  • βενέοι beneoi Elean[41]
  • βορσός borsos cross (Attic stauros)
  • βρα bra brothers, brotherhood (Cf.Attic phratra)
  • βρατάνα bratana ladle (Attic torune) (Doric rhatana) (cf. Aeolic bradanizô brandish, shake off)
  • δειρῆται deirêtai small birds (Macedonian δρῆες drêes or δρῆγες drêges) (Attic strouthoi) (Hsc. trikkos small bird and king by Eleans)
  • ϝράτρα Wratra law, contract (Attic rhetra)
  • σερός seros yesterday (Attic chthes)
  • στερχανά sterchana funeral feast (Attic perideipnon)
  • φίλαξ philax young oak (Macedonian ilax, Latin ilex (Laconian dilax ariocarpus, sorbus)(Modern Cretan azilakas Quercus ilex)
  • φόρβυτα phorbuta gums (Attic oula) (Homeric pherbô feed, eat)

Epirotic

  • ἀγχωρίξαντας anchôrixantas[42] having transferred, postponed[43] Chaonian (Attic metapherô, anaballô) (anchôrizo anchi near +horizô define and Doric x instead of Attic s) (Cf. Ionic anchouros neighbouring) not to be confused with Doric anchôreô Attic ana-chôreô go back, withdraw.
  • ἀκαθαρτία akathartia impurity (Attic/Doric akatharsia) (Lamelles Oraculaires 14)
  • ἀποτράχω apotrachô run away (Attic/Doric apotrechô)[44]
  • ἄσπαλοι aspaloi fishes Athamanian (Attic ichthyes) (Ionic chlossoi) (Cf.LSJ aspalia angling, aspalieus fisherman, aspalieuomai I angle metaph. of a lover, aspalisai: halieusai, sagêneusai. (hals sea)
  • Ἄσπετος Aspetos divine epithet of Achilles in Epirus (Homeric aspetos 'unspeakable, unspeakably great, endless' (Aristotle F 563 Rose; Plutarch, Pyrrhus 1; SH 960,4)[45][46][47][48]
  • γνώσκω gnôskô know (Attic gignôskô) (Ionic/Koine ginôskô) (Latin nōsco)(Attic gnôsis, Latin notio knowledge) (ref.Orion p. 42.17)
  • διαιτός diaitos (Hshc. judge kritês) (Attic diaitêtês arbitrator) Lamelles Oraculaires 16
  • ἐσκιχρέμεν eskichremen lend out πὲρ τοῖ ἀργύρροι (Lamelles Oraculaires 8 of Eubandros) (Attic eis + inf. kichranai from chraomai use)
  • Ϝεῖδυς Weidus knowing (Doric Ϝειδώς) weidôs) (Elean ϝειζός weizos) (Attic εἰδώς) eidôs) (PIE *weid- "to know, to see", Sanskrit veda I know) Cabanes, L'Épire 577,50
  • κάστον kaston wood Athamanian (Attic xylon from xyô scrape, hence xyston); Sanskrit kāṣṭham ("wood, timber, firewood") (Dialectical kalon wood, traditionally derived from kaiô burn kauston sth that can be burnt, kausimon fuel)
  • λῃτῆρες lêïtêres Athamanian priests with garlands Hes.text ἱεροὶ στεφανοφόροι. Ἀθαμᾶνες(LSJ: lêitarchoi public priests ) (hence Leitourgia
  • μανύ manu small Athamanian (Attic mikron, brachu) (Cf. manon rare) (PIE *men- small, thin) (Hsch. banon thin) ( manosporos thinly sown manophullos with small leaves Thphr.HP7.6.2-6.3)
  • Νάϊος Naios or Naos epithet of Dodonaean Zeus (from the spring in the oracle) (cf. Naiades and Pan Naios in Pydna SEG 50:622 (Homeric naô flow, Attic nama spring) (PIE *sna-)
  • παγάομαι pagaomai 'wash in the spring' (of Dodona) (Doric paga Attic pêgê running water, fountain)
  • παμπασία pampasia (to ask peri pampasias cliché phrase in the oracle) (Attic pampêsia full property) (Doric paomai obtain)
  • Πελιγᾶνες Peliganes or Peligones (Epirotan, Macedonian senators)
  • πρᾶμι prami do optative (Attic πράττοιμι prattoimi) Syncope (Lamelles Oraculaires 22)
  • τίνε tine (Attic/Doric tini) to whom (Lamelles Oraculaires 7)
  • τριθυτικόν trithutikon triple sacrifice tri + thuo(Lamelles Oraculaires 138)

Achaean Doric

  • καιρότερον kairoteron (Attic: ἐνωρότερον enôroteron) "earlier" (kairos time, enôros early cf. Horae)
  • κεφαλίδας kephalidas (Attic: κόρσαι korsai) "sideburns" (kephalides was also an alternative for epalxeis 'bastions' in Greek proper)
  • σιαλίς sialis (Attic: βλέννος blennos) (cf. blennorrhea) slime, mud (Greek sialon or sielon saliva, modern Greek σάλιο salio)

See also

References

  1. ^ Roger D. Woodard (2008), "Greek dialects", in: The Ancient Languages of Europe, ed. R. D. Woodard, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 51.
  2. ^ Karali, Maria (2007). "The classification of the ancient Greek dialects". In Christidis, Anastassios-Fivos; Arapopoulou, Maria; Chriti, Maria (eds.). A History of Ancient Greek: From the Beginnings to Late Antiquity. Translated by Markham, Chris. Cambridge University Press. pp. 390–391. ISBN 978-0-521-83307-3.
  3. ^ Méndez Dosuna, Julián (2007). "The Doric dialects". In Christidis, Anastassios-Fivos; Arapopoulou, Maria; Chriti, Maria (eds.). A History of Ancient Greek: From the Beginnings to Late Antiquity. Cambridge University Press. pp. 444–445. ISBN 978-0-521-83307-3.
  4. ^ Striano, Araceli (2014). "Doric". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Bubenik, Vit; Crespo, Emilio; Golston, Chris; Lianeri, Alexandra; Luraghi, Silvia; Matthaios, Stephanos (eds.). Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics. Vol. 1. Brill Publishers. pp. 515–516. ISBN 978-9004225978 – via Academia.edu.
  5. ^ a b Buck, Carl Darling (1900). "The Source of the So-Called Achaean-Doric κοινη". American Journal of Philology. 21 (2): 193–196. doi:10.2307/287905. JSTOR 287905.
  6. ^ "MultiTree: A Digital Library of Language Relationships — Tsakonian". from the original on 2018-10-03.
  7. ^ Moseley, Christopher (2007). Encyclopedia of the world's endangered languages. New York: Routledge. s.v. "Tsakonian".
  8. ^ Çabej, E. (1961). "Die alteren Wohnsitze der Albaner auf der Balkanhalbinsel im Lichte der Sprache und der Ortsnamen". VII Congresso Internaz. Di Sciense Onomastiche: 241–251.; Albanian version BUShT 1962:1.219-227
  9. ^ Eric Hamp. Birnbaum, Henrik; Puhvel, Jaan (eds.). The position of Albanian, Ancient IE dialects, Proceedings of the Conference on IE linguistics held at the University of California, Los Angeles, April 25–27, 1963.
  10. ^ Huld, Martin E. (1986). "Accentual Stratification of Ancient Greek Loanwords in Albanian". Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung. 99 (2): 245–253.
  11. ^ O’Neil, James. 26th Conference of the Australasian Society for Classical Studies, 2005.
  12. ^ a b c d Panagiotis Filos (2017). "The Dialectal Variety of Epirus". In Georgios Giannakis; Emilio Crespo; Panagiotis Filos (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Berlin and Boston: Walter de Gruyter. p. 227. The North-West group together with Doric (proper) formed the so-called 'West Greek' major dialectal group (or simply 'Doric' […]). However, the term 'North-West Doric' is considered more accurate nowadays […] since there is more emphasis on the many features that are common to both groups rather than on their less numerous and largely secondary differences.
  13. ^ Los dialectos dorios del Noroeste. Gramática y estudio dialectal (in Spanish). Salamanca. 1985. p. 508.
  14. ^ Panagiotis Filos (2017). "The Dialectal Variety of Epirus". In Georgios Giannakis; Emilio Crespo; Panagiotis Filos (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Berlin and Boston: Walter de Gruyter. p. 230.
  15. ^ Mendez Dosuna, Doric dialects, p. 452 online at Google Books).
  16. ^ Goodwin, William Watson (1874). Plutarch's Morals, tr. by several hands. Corrected and revised by W.W. Goodwin. Greek questions 9.
  17. ^ IG IX,1² 3:609
  18. ^ Die Inschriften von Olympia, IvO 1.
  19. ^ Sophie Minon, Les Inscriptions Éléennes Dialectale, reviewed by Stephen Colvin (online).
  20. ^ Lamelles Oraculaires 77.
  21. ^ John Potter (1751). Archaeologia Graeca Or the Antiquities of Greece. C. Strahan.
  22. ^ Cabanes, L'Épire de la mort de Pyrrhos a la conquête romaine (272–167 av. J.C.). Paris 1976, p. 534,1.
  23. ^ 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.
  24. ^ Hammond, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière (1993) [1989]. The Macedonian State. Origins, Institutions and History (reprint ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-814927-1.
  25. ^ Michael Meier-Brügger: Indo-European linguistics. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin and New York 2003, p. 28 (online on Google books): "The Macedonian of the ancient kingdom of northern Greece is probably nothing other than a northern Greek dialect of Doric".
  26. ^ 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.
  27. ^ Olivier Masson (2003) [1996]. "Macedonian language". In Simon Hornblower; Antony Spawforth (eds.). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (revised 3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 905–906. ISBN 0-19-860641-9.
  28. ^ Brian D. Joseph: "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. Online paper, 2001.
  29. ^ Johannes Engels: "Macedonians and Greeks", p. 95. In: Joseph Roisman, Ian Worthington: A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Chapter 5. John Wiley & Sons, New York 2011.
  30. ^ a b c 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. pp. 321–322. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  31. ^ Woodard, Roger D., ed. (2008). The Ancient Languages of Europe. Cambridge University Press. between pages 49 and 50. ISBN 978-1-139-46932-6.
  32. ^ Classification of the West Greek dialects at the time about 350 B.C. by Antonín Bartoněk,Amsterdam, Adolf M. Hakkert, 1972, p. 186.
  33. ^ Vit Bubenik (2000). "Variety of speech in Greek linguistics: The dialects and the koinè". In Sylvain Auroux; et al. (eds.). Geschichte der Sprachwissenschaften. Ein internationales Handbuch zur Entwicklung der Sprachforschung von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart. Vol. Band 1. Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter. p. 441 f. ISBN 978-3-11-011103-3.
  34. ^ a b c Panagiotis Filos (2017). "The Dialectal Variety of Epirus". In Georgios Giannakis; Emilio Crespo; Panagiotis Filos (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Berlin and Boston: Walter de Gruyter. pp. 230–233.
  35. ^ Vit Bubenik (1989). Hellenistic and Roman Greece as a Sociolinguistic Area. Amsterdam. pp. 193–213.
  36. ^ Wojciech Sowa (2018). "The dialectology of Greek". In Matthias Fritz; Brian Joseph; Jared Klein (eds.). Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics. De Gruyter Mouton. p. 715. ISBN 978-3-11-054036-9. In different regions of Greece, however, different sorts of koinai emerged, of which the best known was the Doric Koinē, preserving general Doric features, but without local differences, and with an admixture of Attic forms. As in the case of the Doric Koinē, the Northwest Koinē (connected with the so-called Aetolian League) displayed the same mixture of native dialectal elements with Attic elements.
  37. ^ S. Minon (2014). "Diffusion de l'attique et expansion des koinai dans le Péloponnèse et en Grèce centrale". Actes de la journée internationale de dialectologie grecque du 18 mars 2011, université Paris-Ouest Nanterre. Geneva. pp. 1–18.
  38. ^ Plutarch Greek question 51
  39. ^ Dionysism and Comedy [1] by Xavier Riu
  40. ^ Raphael Kühner, Friedrich Blass, Ausführliche Grammatik der Griechischen Sprache [2]
  41. ^ Elis — Olympia — bef. c. 500-450 BC IvO 7
  42. ^ Epeiros — Dodona — 4th c. BC SEG 15:397
  43. ^ The Oracles of Zeus: Dodona, Olympia, Ammon - Page 261 [3] by Herbert William Parke
  44. ^ Epeiros — Dodona — ~340 BC SEG 26.700 - Trans.
  45. ^ Alexander the Great: A Reader [4] by Ian Worthing
  46. ^ Greek Mythography in the Roman World [5] By Alan Cameron (Aspetides)[6]
  47. ^ (cf. Athenian secretary: Aspetos, son of Demostratos from Kytheros ~340 BC)[7]
  48. ^ Pokorny - aspetos

Further reading

  • Bakker, Egbert J., ed. 2010. A companion to the Ancient Greek language. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Cassio, Albio Cesare. 2002. "The language of Doric comedy." In The language of Greek comedy. Edited by Anton Willi, 51–83. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Colvin, Stephen C. 2007. A historical Greek reader: Mycenaean to the koiné. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Horrocks, Geoffrey. 2010. Greek: A history of the language and its speakers. 2nd ed. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Palmer, Leonard R. 1980. The Greek language. London: Faber & Faber.

External links

  • Doric Greek in Encyclopædia Britannica
  • Grammar of the Greek Language (M1 Doric by Benjamin Franklin Fisk (1844)
  • The Elements of Greek Grammar Doric by Richard Valpy, Charles Anthon (1834)
  • Doric/Northwest Greek Brill's New Pauly Online

doric, greek, modern, doric, dialect, scotland, doric, dialect, scotland, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sou. For the modern Doric dialect of Scotland see Doric dialect Scotland This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Doric Greek news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Doric or Dorian Ancient Greek Dwrismos romanized Dōrismos also known as West Greek was a group of Ancient Greek dialects its varieties are divided into the Doric proper and Northwest Doric subgroups Doric was spoken in a vast area that included northern Greece Acarnania Aetolia Epirus western and eastern Locris Phocis Doris and possibly ancient Macedonia most of the Peloponnese Achaea Elis Messenia Laconia Argolid Aegina Corinth and Megara the southern Aegean Kythira Milos Thera Crete Karpathos and Rhodes as well as the colonies of some of the aforementioned regions in Cyrene Magna Graecia the Black Sea the Ionian Sea and the Adriatic Sea It was also spoken in the Greek sanctuaries of Dodona Delphi and Olympia as well as at the four Panhellenic festivals the Isthmian Nemean Pythian and Olympic Games 2 3 4 Doric GreekRegionAcarnania Aetolia Epirus western and eastern Locris Phocis Doris Achaea Elis Messenia Laconia Argolid Aegina Corinth Megara Kythira Milos Thera Crete Karpathos Rhodes and possibly ancient MacedoniaAlso colonies of the aforementioned regions in Cyrene Magna Graecia Black Sea Ionian Sea and Adriatic SeaErac 800 100 BC evolved into the Tsakonian languageLanguage familyIndo European HellenicAncient GreekWesternDoric GreekEarly formProto GreekDialectsDoric proper Laconian Argolic Corinthian Northwest Doric Phocian Locrian Elean Epirote Ancient Macedonian Achaean Doric Achaean Doric koine Northwest Doric koineWriting systemGreek alphabetLanguage codesISO 639 3 Linguist Listgrc dorGlottologdori1248Distribution of Greek dialects in Greece in the classical period 1 Western group Doric proper Northwest Doric Achaean Doric probably Northwest Doric Central group Aeolic Arcado Cypriot Eastern group Attic IonicDistribution of Greek dialects in Magna Graecia Southern Italy and Sicily in the classical period Western group Doric proper Northwest Doric Achaean Doric probably Northwest Doric Eastern group Attic IonicBy Hellenistic times under the Achaean League an Achaean Doric koine appeared exhibiting many peculiarities common to all Doric dialects which delayed the spread of the Attic based Koine Greek to the Peloponnese until the 2nd century BC 5 The only living descendant of Doric is the Tsakonian language which is still spoken in Greece today 6 though critically endangered with only a few hundred mostly elderly fluent speakers left 7 It is widely accepted that Doric originated in the mountains of Epirus in northwestern Greece the original seat of the Dorians It was expanded to all other regions during the Dorian invasion c 1150 BC and the colonisations that followed The presence of a Doric state Doris in central Greece north of the Gulf of Corinth led to the theory that Doric had originated in northwest Greece or maybe beyond in the Balkans The dialect s distribution towards the north extends to the Megarian colony of Byzantium and the Corinthian colonies of Potidaea Epidamnos Apollonia and Ambracia there it further added words to what would become the Albanian language 8 9 probably via traders from a now extinct Illyrian intermediary 10 In the north local epigraphical evidence includes the decrees of the Epirote League the Pella curse tablet three additional lesser known Macedonian inscriptions all of them identifiable as Doric 11 numerous inscriptions from a number of Greek colonies Furthermore there is an abundance of place names used to examine features of the northern Doric dialects Southern dialects in addition to numerous inscriptions coins and names have also provided much more literary evidence through authors such as Alcman Pindar and Archimedes of Syracuse among others all of whom wrote in Doric There are also ancient dictionaries that have survived notably the one by Hesychius of Alexandria whose work preserved many dialectal words from throughout the Greek speaking world Contents 1 Variants 1 1 Doric proper 1 1 1 Laconian 1 1 2 Argolic 1 1 3 Corinthian 1 2 Northwest Doric 1 2 1 Phocian 1 2 2 Locrian 1 2 3 Elean 1 2 4 Epirote 1 2 5 Ancient Macedonian 1 2 6 Achaean Doric 1 2 7 Achaean Doric koine 1 2 8 Northwest Doric koine 2 Phonology 2 1 Vowels 2 1 1 Long a 2 1 2 Compensatory lengthening of e and o 2 1 3 Contraction of a and e 2 1 4 Synizesis 2 1 5 Proto Greek a 2 2 Consonants 2 2 1 Proto Greek ti 2 2 2 Proto Greek ts 2 2 3 Digamma 2 3 Accentuation 3 Morphology 3 1 Future tense 4 Glossary 4 1 Common 4 2 Doric proper 4 2 1 Argolic 4 2 2 Cretan 4 2 3 Laconian 4 2 4 Magna Graecia s Doric 4 3 North West 4 3 1 Aetolian Acarnanian 4 3 2 Delphic Locrian 4 3 3 Elean 4 3 4 Epirotic 4 3 5 Achaean Doric 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksVariants EditDoric proper Edit Doric Greek dialectsWhere the Doric dialect group fits in the overall classification of ancient Greek dialects depends to some extent on the classification Several views are stated under Greek dialects The prevalent theme of most views listed there is that Doric is a subgroup of West Greek Some use the terms Northern Greek or Northwest Greek instead The geographic distinction is only verbal and ostensibly is misnamed all of Doric was spoken south of Southern Greek or Southeastern Greek Be that as it may Northern Greek is based on a presumption that Dorians came from the north and on the fact that Doric is closely related to Northwest Greek When the distinction began is not known All the northerners might have spoken one dialect at the time of the Dorian invasion certainly Doric could only have further differentiated into its classical dialects when the Dorians were in place in the south Thus West Greek is the most accurate name for the classical dialects Tsakonian a descendant of Laconian Doric Spartan is still spoken on the southern Argolid coast of the Peloponnese in the modern prefectures of Arcadia and Laconia Today it is a source of considerable interest to linguists and an endangered dialect Laconian Edit Laconia in Greece Argolis in Greece Laconian was spoken by the population of Laconia in the southern Peloponnese and also by its colonies Taras and Herakleia in Magna Graecia Sparta was the seat of ancient Laconia Laconian is attested in inscriptions on pottery and stone from the seventh century BC A dedication to Helen dates from the second quarter of the seventh century Taras was founded in 706 and its founders must already have spoken Laconic Many documents from the state of Sparta survive whose citizens called themselves Lacedaemonians after the name of the valley in which they lived Homer calls it hollow Lacedaemon though he refers to a pre Dorian period The seventh century Spartan poet Alcman used a dialect that some consider to be predominantly Laconian Philoxenus of Alexandria wrote a treatise On the Laconian dialect Argolic Edit Argolic was spoken in the thickly settled northeast Peloponnese at for example Argos Mycenae Hermione Troezen Epidaurus and as close to Athens as the island of Aegina As Mycenaean Greek had been spoken in this dialect region in the Bronze Age it is clear that the Dorians overran it but were unable to take Attica The Dorians went on from Argos to Crete and Rhodes Ample inscriptional material of a legal political and religious content exists from at least the sixth century BC Corinthian Edit Corinthia in Greece Corinthian was spoken first in the isthmus region between the Peloponnesus and mainland Greece that is the Isthmus of Corinth The cities and states of the Corinthian dialect region were Corinth Sicyon Archaies Kleones Phlius the colonies of Corinth in western Greece Corcyra Leucas Anactorium Ambracia and others the colonies in and around Italy Syracuse Sicily and Ancona and the colonies of Corcyra Dyrrachium and Apollonia The earliest inscriptions at Corinth date from the early sixth century BC They use a Corinthian epichoric alphabet See under Attic Greek Corinth contradicts the prejudice that Dorians were rustic militarists as some consider the speakers of Laconian to be Positioned on an international trade route Corinth played a leading part in the re civilizing of Greece after the centuries of disorder and isolation following the collapse of Mycenaean Greece Northwest Doric Edit The Northwest Doric or Northwest Greek with Northwest Doric now considered more accurate so as not to distance the group from Doric proper group is closely related to Doric proper while sometimes there is no distinction between Doric and the Northwest Doric 12 Whether it is to be considered a part of the southern Doric Group or the latter a part of it or the two considered subgroups of West Greek the dialects and their grouping remain the same West Thessalian and Boeotian had come under a strong Northwest Doric influence While Northwest Doric is generally seen as a dialectal group 12 dissenting views exist such as that of Mendez Dosuna who argues that Northwest Doric is not a proper dialectal group but rather merely a case of areal dialectal convergence 13 Throughout the Northwest Doric area most internal differences did not hinder mutual understanding though Filos citing Bubenik notes that there were certain cases where a bit of accommodation may have been necessary 14 The earliest epigraphic texts for Northwest Doric date to the 6th 5th century BC 12 These are thought to provide evidence for Northwest Doric features especially the phonology and morphophonology but most of the features thus attributed to Northwest Doric are not exclusive to it 12 The Northwest Doric dialects differ from the main Doric Group dialects in the below features 15 Dative plural of the third declension in ois ois instead of si si Ἀkarnanois ἱppeois Akarnanois hippeois for Ἀkarnᾶsin ἱppeῦsin Akarnasin hippeusin to the Acarnanian knights ἐn en accusative instead of eἰs eis en Naupakton into Naupactus st st for s8 sth genestai genestai for genesthai to become mistwma mistoma for misthoma payment for hiring ar for er amara Dor amera Att hemera day Elean wargon for Doric wergon and Attic ergon work Dative singular in oi instead of oi toῖ Ἀsklapioῖ Doric tῷ Ἀsklapiῷ Attic Ἀsklhpiῷ to Asclepius Middle participle in eimenos instead of oumenosFour or five dialects of Northwestern Doric are recognised Phocian Edit This dialect was spoken in Phocis and in its main settlement Delphi Because of that it is also cited as Delphian citation needed Plutarch says that Delphians pronounce b in the place of p bikrὸn for pikrὸn 16 Locrian Edit Locrian Greek is attested in two locations Ozolian Locris along the northwest coast of the Gulf of Corinth around Amfissa earliest c 500 BC 17 Opuntian Locris on the coast of mainland Greece opposite northwest Euboea around Opus Elean Edit The dialect of Elis earliest c 600 BC 18 is considered after Aeolic Greek one of the most difficult for the modern reader of epigraphic texts 19 Epirote Edit Main article Epirote Greek Spoken at the Dodona oracle earliest c 550 500 BC 20 firstly under control of the Thesprotians 21 later organized in the Epirote League since c 370 BC 22 Ancient Macedonian Edit Most scholars maintain that ancient Macedonian was a Greek dialect 23 probably of the Northwestern Doric group in particular 24 25 26 Olivier Masson in his article for The Oxford Classical Dictionary talks of two schools of thought one rejecting the Greek affiliation of Macedonian and preferring to treat it as an Indo European language of the Balkans of contested affiliation examples are Bonfante 1987 and Russu 1938 the other favouring a purely Greek nature of Macedonian as a northern Greek dialect with numerous adherents from the 19th century and on Fick 1874 Hoffmann 1906 Hatzidakis 1897 etc Kalleris 1964 and 1976 27 Masson himself argues with the largely Greek character of the Macedonian onomastics and sees Macedonian as a Greek dialect characterised by its marginal position and by local pronunciations and probably most closely related to the dialects of the Greek North West Locrian Aetolian Phocidian Epirote Brian D Joseph acknowledges the closeness of Macedonian to Greek even contemplating to group them into a Hellenic branch of Indo European but retains that t he slender evidence is open to different interpretations so that no definitive answer is really possible 28 Johannes Engels has pointed to the Pella curse tablet written in Doric Greek This has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect 29 Miltiades Hatzopoulos has suggested that the Macedonian dialect of the 4th century BC as attested in the Pella curse tablet was a sort of Macedonian koine resulting from the encounter of the idiom of the Aeolic speaking populations around Mount Olympus and the Pierian Mountains with the Northwest Greek speaking Argead Macedonians hailing from Argos Orestikon who founded the kingdom of Lower Macedonia 30 However according to Hatzopoulos B Helly expanded and improved his own earlier suggestion and presented the hypothesis of a North Achaean substratum extending as far north as the head of the Thermaic Gulf which had a continuous relation in prehistoric times both in Thessaly and Macedonia with the Northwest Greek speaking populations living on the other side of the Pindus mountain range and contacts became cohabitation when the Argead Macedonians completed their wandering from Orestis to Lower Macedonia in the 7th c BC 30 According to this hypothesis Hatzopoulos concludes that the Macedonian Greek dialect of the historical period which is attested in inscriptions is a sort of koine resulting from the interaction and the influences of various elements the most important of which are the North Achaean substratum the Northwest Greek idiom of the Argead Macedonians and the Thracian and Phrygian adstrata 30 Achaean Doric Edit Achaean Doric most probably belonged to the Northwest Doric group 31 It was spoken in Achaea in the northwestern Peloponnese on the islands of Cephalonia and Zakynthos in the Ionian Sea and in the Achaean colonies of Magna Graecia in Southern Italy including Sybaris and Crotone This strict Doric dialect was later subject to the influence of mild Doric spoken in Corinthia It survived until 350 BC 32 Achaean Doric koine Edit By Hellenistic times under the Achaean League an Achaean Doric koine appeared exhibiting many peculiarities common to all Doric dialects which delayed the spread of the Attic based Koine Greek to the Peloponnese until the 2nd century BC 5 Northwest Doric koine Edit Political situation in the Greek world around the time at which the Northwest Doric koine arose The Northwest Doric koine refers to a supraregional North West common variety that emerged in the third and second centuries BC and was used in the official texts of the Aetolian League 33 34 Such texts have been found in W Locris Phocis and Phtiotis among other sites 35 It contained a mix of native Northwest Doric dialectal elements and Attic forms 36 It was apparently based on the most general features of Northwest Doric eschewing less common local traits 34 37 Its rise was driven by both linguistic and non linguistic factors with non linguistic motivating factors including the spread of the rival Attic Ionic koine after it was recruited by the Macedonian state for administration and the political unification of a vast territories by the Aetolian League and the state of Epirus The Northwest Doric koine was thus both a linguistic and a political rival of the Attic Ionic koine 34 Phonology EditVowels Edit Long a Edit Proto Greek long a is retained as a in contrast to Attic developing a long open e eta in at least some positions Doric ga mater Attic ge meter earth mother Compensatory lengthening of e and o Edit In certain Doric dialects Severe Doric e and o lengthen by compensatory lengthening or contraction to eta or omega in contrast to Attic ei and ou spurious diphthongs Severe Doric ō Attic ou second declension genitive singular ōs ous second declension accusative plural en ein present second aorist infinitive active Contraction of a and e Edit Contraction Proto Greek ae gt Doric e eta Attic a Synizesis Edit Proto Greek eo ea gt some Doric dialects io ia Proto Greek a Edit Proto Greek short a gt Doric short a Attic e in certain words Doric hiaros Artamis Attic hieros holy ArtemisConsonants Edit Proto Greek ti Edit Proto Greek ti is retained assibilated to si in Attic Doric phati Attic phesi he says 3rd sing pres of athematic verb legonti legousi they say 3rd pl pres of thematic verb wikati eikosi twenty triakatioi triakosioi three hundred Proto Greek ts Edit Proto Greek ts gt ss between vowels Attic shares the same development but further shortens the geminate to s Proto Greek metsos gt Doric messos Attic mesos middle from Proto Indo European medʰyos compare Latin medius Digamma Edit Initial w ϝ is preserved in earlier Doric lost in Attic Doric woikos Attic oikos house from Proto Indo European weyḱ woyḱ compare Latin vicus village Literary texts in Doric and inscriptions from the Hellenistic age have no digamma Accentuation Edit For information on the peculiarities of Doric accentuation see Ancient Greek accent Doric Morphology EditThis article may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the article There might be a discussion about this on the talk page April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Numeral tetores Attic tettares Ionic tesseres four Ordinal pratos Attic Ionic prōtos first Demonstrative pronoun tenos this Attic Ionic e keinost for h from Proto Indo European s in article and demonstrative pronoun Doric toi tai toutoi tautai Attic Ionic hoi hai houtoi hautai Third person plural athematic or root aorist n Attic san Doric edon Attic Ionic edosanFirst person plural active mes Attic Ionic men Future se ō Attic s ō praxetai prak se etai Attic Ionic praxetaiModal particle ka Attic Ionic an Doric ai ka ai de ka ai tis ka ean ean de ean tisTemporal adverbs in ka Attic Ionic te hoka tokaLocative adverbs in ei Attic Koine ou teide pei Future tense Edit The aorist and future of verbs in izō azō has x versus Attic Koine s Doric agōnixato Attic agōnisato he contended Similarly k before suffixes beginning with t Glossary EditThis article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is 1 inconsequent transcription cp Ἐlwos Eloos karrwn karrōn myrmhdones myrmedones 2 missing greek terms cp Attic gignosko Please help improve this article if you can October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Common Edit aἰgades aigades Attic aἶges aiges goats aἶges aiges Attic kymata kymata waves ἁlia halia Attic ἐkklhsia ekklesia assembly Cf Heliaia brykainai brykainai Attic ἱereiai hiereiai priestesses bryketos bryketos Attic brygmos brygmos brykh8mos brykethmos chewing grinding gnashing with the teeth damiorgoi damiorgoi Attic ἄrxontes archontes high officials Cf Attic dhmioyrgos demiourgos public worker for the people demos craftsman creator Hesychius damioyrgoi aἱ pornai prostitutes Zamiourgoi Elean Ἐlwos Eloos Hephaestus Ἥfaistos parὰ Dwrieῦsin karrwn karrōn Attic kreittwn kreittōn stronger Ionic kreissōn Cretan kartōn koryghs koryges Attic kῆry3 keryx herald messenger Aeolic karoux laios laios Homeric Attic and Modern Greek ἀristeros aristeros left Cretan laia laia Attic aspis shield Hesych laῖfa laipha laiba laiba because the shield was held with the left hand Cf Latin laevus laia laia Attic Modern Greek leia leia prey lew leiw le i ō Attic ἐ8elw ethelō will oἴnwtros oinōtros vine pole Greek oἶnos oinos wine Cf Oenotrus mogionti mogionti Ionic pyressoysi pyressousi they are on fire have fever Attic mogoῦsi mogousi they suffer take pains to myrmhdones myrmedones Attic myrmhkes myrmekes ants Cf Myrmidons ὄptillos optillos or optilos eye Attic ophthalmos Latin oculus Attic optikos of sight Optics paomai paomai Attic ktaomai ktaomai acquire ῥapidopoios rhapidopoios poet broiderer pattern weaver boot maker rhapis needle for Attic rhaphis skana skana Attic skene tent stage scene Homeric klisie Doric skanama encampment tan8alyzein tanthalyzein Attic tremein tremein to tremble tynh tune or toune you nominative Attic sy dative teein teein Attic soi soi xanaktion chanaktion Attic mwron mōron chan goose Doric proper Edit Argolic Edit Ballakrades Ballacrades title of Argive athletes on a feast day Cf achras wild pear tree 38 Daylὶs Daulis mimic festival at Argos acc Pausanias 10 4 9 daulis means thicket 39 Hes daulon fire log droon droon strong Attic ischyron dynaton kester kester youngman Attic neanias kyllarabis kyllarabis discus and gymnasium at Argos semalia semalia ragged tattered garments Attic rhake cf himatia clothes ὤbea obea eggs Attic ὠa oa Cretan Edit ἀgela agela group of boys in the Cretan agōge Cf Homeric Greek ἀgelh agele herd Cretan apagelos not yet received in agele boy under 17 ἀdnos adnos holy pure Attic ἁgnos hagnos Ariadne ἀϝtὸs aWtos Attic autos Hsch aus aὐs aὐtos Krῆtes kaὶ Lakwnes ἄkara akaralegs Attic skele ἁmakis hamakis once Attic hapax ἄrgetos argetos juniper cedar Attic arkeuthos aὐka auka power Attic alke ἀfrattias aphrattias strong balikiῶtai balikiotai Koine synepheboi Attic helikiotai age peers of the same age helikia brity britu sweet Attic glyku damiow damioo Cretan and Boeotian for Attic zemioo to damage punish harm dampon dampon first milk curdled by heating over embers Attic puriephthon puriate dῶla dola ears Attic ota Tarentine ata Ϝelxanos Welchanos for Cretan Zeus and Welchanios Belchanios Gelchanos Elchanios Cnossian month ϝergaddomai wergaddomai I work Attic ergazomai ϝῆma Wema garment Attic heima Aeolic emma Koine h immation Cf Attic amphi ennumi I dress amph iesis clothing ἰbῆn iben wine Dialectal Ϝoἶnos Woinos Attic oinos accusative ἰbῆna ibena ἴtton itton one Attic hen ἕn karanw karano goat ϟosmos kosmos and kormos archontes in Crete body of kosmoi Attic kosmos order ornament honour world kormos trunk of a tree kyferon kyfh kypheron kuphe head Attic kephale lakos lakos rag tattered garment Attic rhakos Aeolic brakos long robe lacks the sense ragged malkenis malkenis Attic parthenos Hsch malakinnes ὄ8ryn othrun mountain Attic oros Cf Othrys ῥyston rhyston spear seῖfa seipha darkness Attic zophos skotia Aeolic dnophos speῦsdos speusdos title of Cretan officer Cf speudo speus rush tagana tagana Attic tauta these things tiros tiros summer Homeric Attic theros tre tre you accusative Attic se Laconian Edit ἀbhr aber storeroom oἴkhma stoὰs ἔxon tameῖon Lakwnes ἀϝwr awor dawn Attic ἠws eos Latin aurora ἄdda adda need deficiency Attic endeia Aristophanes of Byzantium fr 33 ἀddayon addauon dry i e azauon or addanon Attic xeron aἴkoyda aikouda Attic aischune aἰsxynh Lakwnes aἵmatia haimatia blood broth Spartan Melas Zomos Black soup haima haimatos blood ἀitas aitas Attic ἐrwmenos erōmenos beloved boy in a pederastic relationship ἀkkor akkor tube bag Attic askos ἀkxalibar akchalibar bed Attic skimpous Koine krabbatos ἀmbroti3as ambrotixas having begun past participle amphi or ana Attic aparxamenos aparchomai Doric ixas for Attic isas ἀmpessai ampesai Attic amphiesai to dress ἀpaboidwr apaboidor out of tune Attic ekmelos Cf Homeric singer Aoidos emmelos aboidor in tune Ἀpella apella Attic ἐkklhsia ekklesia assembly in Sparta verb apellazein ἀrbylis arbylis Attic ἀryballos aryballos Hesychius ἀrbylida lhky8on Lakwnes ἄttasi attasi wake up get up Attic anastethi babalon babalon imperative of cry aloud shout Attic kraugason bagaron bagaron Attic xliaron chliaron warm Cf Attic fwgw phōgō roast Laconian word bafa bapha broth Attic zomos Attic bafh baphe dipping of red hot iron in water Koine and Modern Greek bafh vafi dyeing ϝeikati weikati twenty Attic eἴkosi eikosi bela bela sun and dawn Laconian Attic helios Cretan abelios bernwme8a bernometha Attic klerosometha we will cast or obtain by lot inf berreai Cf Attic meiresthai receive portion Doric bebramena for heimarmene allotted by Moirai beskeros beskeros bread Attic artos bhlhma belema hindrance river dam Laconian bhrixalkon berichalkon fennel Attic marathos chalkos bronze bibasis bibasis Spartan dance for boys and girls bidyoi bidyoi bideoi bidiaioi also officers in charge of the ephebes at Sparta biὡr bior almost maybe Attic ἴsws isos sxedon schedon wihor ϝiὡr blagis blagis spot Attic kelis boῦa boua group of boys in the Spartan agōge bo y agos bo u agos leader of a boua at Sparta byllixhs bulliches Laconian dancer Attic orchestes bwnhma bonema speech Homeric Ionic eirema eireo Cf Attic phonema sound speech gabergor gabergor labourer ga earth wergon work Cf georgos farmer gaiadas gaiadas citizens people Attic demos gonar gonar mother Laconian gonades children Eur Med 717 dabelos dabelos torch Attic dalos Syracusan daelos dawelos Modern Greek davlos Laconian dabῇ dabei Attic kauthei it should be burnt diza diza goat Attic aix and Hera aigophagos Goat eater in Sparta eἴrhn eiren Attic ἔfhbos ephebos Spartan youth who has completed his 12th year eἰspnhlas eispnelas Attic ἐrasths erastes one who inspires love a lover Attic eispneo inhale breathe ἐ3wbadia exobadia Attic enotia ota ears ἔforoi ephoroi Attic ἔforoi ἄrxontes archontes high officials at Sparta Cf Attic ἔforos ephoros overseer guardian 8oraths Thorates Apollon thoraios containing the semen god of growth and increase 8rῶna3 thronax drone Attic kephen kafa kapha washing bathing tub Attic louter Cf skaphe basin bowl keloῖa keloia kelya kelea also contest for boys and youths at Sparta kira kirafox Attic alopex Hsch kiraphos mesodma mesodma messodoma woman and ἀn8rwpw anthropo Attic gune myrtalis myrtalis Butcher s broom Attic oxumursine Myrtale real name of Olympias pasor pasor passion Attic pathos por por leg foot Attic pous poyrdain pourdain restaurant Koine mageirion Cf purdalon purodansion from pyr fire hence pyre salabar salabar cook Common Doric Attic mageiros sika sika pig Attic hus and grona female pig siria siria safeness Attic asphaleia psi8wmias psithomias ill sick Attic asthenes Lakwnes tὸn ἀs8enῆ psilaker psilaker first dancer ὠba oba Attic kwmh kōme village one of five quarters of the city of Sparta Magna Graecia s Doric Edit ἀsty3enoi astyxenoi Metics Tarentine bannas bannas king basileus wanax anax 40 beilarmostaὶ beilarmostai cavalry officers Tarentine Attic ilarchai ile squadron Laconian harmost dostore dostore you make Tarentine Attic poieῖte 8aylia Thaulia festival of Tarentum 8aylakizein thaulakizein to demand sth with uproar Tarentine 8aylizein thaulizein to celebrate like Dorians 8aῦlos Thaulos Macedonian Ares Thessalian Zeὺs 8aylios Zeus Thaulios Athenian Zeὺs 8aylwn Zeus Thaulon Athenian family 8aylwnidai Thaulonidai ῥaganon rhaganon easy Thuriian Attic rhaidion Aeolic braidion skytas skytas back side of neck Attic trachelos thnhs tenes till Tarentine Attic ἕws heos tryfwmata tryphomata whatever are fed or nursed children cattle Attic thremmata ὑetis huetis jug amphora Tarentine Attic hydris hydria huetos rain North West Edit Aetolian Acarnanian Edit ἀgridion agridion village Aetolian Attic chorion Hesychius text ἀgridion kwmarion xwrion vA parὰ Aἰtwloῖs dim of agros countryside field ἀeria aeria fog Aetolian Attic omichle aer air Hsch ἀeria ὀmixlh parὰ Aἰtwloῖs kibba kibba wallet bag Aetolian Attic phra pera Cypr kibisis Cf Attic kibwtos kibotos ark kibotion box Suid cites kibos plhtomon pletomon Acarnanian old ancient Attic palaion palaiotaton very old Delphic Locrian Edit deilomai deilomai will want Locrian Delphian Attic boulomai Coan delomai Doric bolomai Thessalian belloumai ϝargana Wargana female worker epithet for Athena Delphic Attic Ergane Attic ergon work Doric Wergon Elean ϝargon Wargon ϝerrw Werro go away Locrian Attic erro Hsch berres fugitive berreuo escape Ϝesparioi Loϟroὶ Wesparioi Lokroi Epizephyrian Western Locrians Attic hesperios of evening western Doric wesperios cf Latin Vesper ὀpliai opliai places where the Locrians counted their cattleElean Edit ἀϝlaneo s aWlaneos without fraud honestly IvO7 Attic adolos Hsch alanes true Tarentinian alaneos absolutely ἀmilly3 amillux scythe Attic drepanon in accus ἀmillyka Boeotian amillakas wine ἀttamios attamios unpunished Attic azemios from an earliest addamios cf Cretan Boeotian damioo punish babakoi babakoi cicadas Elean Attic tettiges in Pontus babakoi frogs baideios baideios ready Attic hetoimos heteos fitness beneoi beneoi Elean 41 borsos borsos cross Attic stauros bra bra brothers brotherhood Cf Attic phratra bratana bratana ladle Attic torune Doric rhatana cf Aeolic bradanizo brandish shake off deirῆtai deiretai small birds Macedonian drῆes drees or drῆges dreges Attic strouthoi Hsc trikkos small bird and king by Eleans ϝratra Wratra law contract Attic rhetra seros seros yesterday Attic chthes sterxana sterchana funeral feast Attic perideipnon fila3 philax young oak Macedonian ilax Latin ilex Laconian dilax ariocarpus sorbus Modern Cretan azilakas Quercus ilex forbyta phorbuta gums Attic oula Homeric pherbo feed eat Epirotic Edit ἀgxwri3antas anchorixantas 42 having transferred postponed 43 Chaonian Attic metaphero anaballo anchorizo anchi near horizo define and Doric x instead of Attic s Cf Ionic anchouros neighbouring not to be confused with Doric anchoreo Attic ana choreo go back withdraw ἀka8artia akathartia impurity Attic Doric akatharsia Lamelles Oraculaires 14 ἀpotraxw apotracho run away Attic Doric apotrecho 44 ἄspaloi aspaloi fishes Athamanian Attic ichthyes Ionic chlossoi Cf LSJ aspalia angling aspalieus fisherman aspalieuomai I angle metaph of a lover aspalisai halieusai sageneusai hals sea Ἄspetos Aspetos divine epithet of Achilles in Epirus Homeric aspetos unspeakable unspeakably great endless Aristotle F 563 Rose Plutarch Pyrrhus 1 SH 960 4 45 46 47 48 gnwskw gnosko know Attic gignosko Ionic Koine ginosko Latin nōsco Attic gnosis Latin notio knowledge ref Orion p 42 17 diaitos diaitos Hshc judge krites Attic diaitetes arbitrator Lamelles Oraculaires 16 ἐskixremen eskichremen lend out pὲr toῖ ἀrgyrroi Lamelles Oraculaires 8 of Eubandros Attic eis inf kichranai from chraomai use Ϝeῖdys Weidus knowing Doric Ϝeidws weidos Elean ϝeizos weizos Attic eἰdws eidos PIE weid to know to see Sanskrit veda I know Cabanes L Epire 577 50 kaston kaston wood Athamanian Attic xylon from xyo scrape hence xyston Sanskrit kaṣṭham wood timber firewood Dialectical kalon wood traditionally derived from kaio burn kauston sth that can be burnt kausimon fuel lῃtῆres leiteres Athamanian priests with garlands Hes text ἱeroὶ stefanoforoi Ἀ8amᾶnes LSJ leitarchoi public priests hence Leitourgia many manu small Athamanian Attic mikron brachu Cf manon rare PIE men small thin Hsch banon thin manosporos thinly sown manophullos with small leaves Thphr HP7 6 2 6 3 Naios Naios or Naos epithet of Dodonaean Zeus from the spring in the oracle cf Naiades and Pan Naios in Pydna SEG 50 622 Homeric nao flow Attic nama spring PIE sna pagaomai pagaomai wash in the spring of Dodona Doric paga Attic pege running water fountain pampasia pampasia to ask peri pampasias cliche phrase in the oracle Attic pampesia full property Doric paomai obtain Peligᾶnes Peliganes or Peligones Epirotan Macedonian senators prᾶmi prami do optative Attic prattoimi prattoimi Syncope Lamelles Oraculaires 22 tine tine Attic Doric tini to whom Lamelles Oraculaires 7 tri8ytikon trithutikon triple sacrifice tri thuo Lamelles Oraculaires 138 Achaean Doric Edit kairoteron kairoteron Attic ἐnwroteron enoroteron earlier kairos time enoros early cf Horae kefalidas kephalidas Attic korsai korsai sideburns kephalides was also an alternative for epalxeis bastions in Greek proper sialis sialis Attic blennos blennos cf blennorrhea slime mud Greek sialon or sielon saliva modern Greek salio salio See also EditGriko languageReferences Edit Roger D Woodard 2008 Greek dialects in The Ancient Languages of Europe ed R D Woodard Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 51 Karali Maria 2007 The classification of the ancient Greek dialects In Christidis Anastassios Fivos Arapopoulou Maria Chriti Maria eds A History of Ancient Greek From the Beginnings to Late Antiquity Translated by Markham Chris Cambridge University Press pp 390 391 ISBN 978 0 521 83307 3 Mendez Dosuna Julian 2007 The Doric dialects In Christidis Anastassios Fivos Arapopoulou Maria Chriti Maria eds A History of Ancient Greek From the Beginnings to Late Antiquity Cambridge University Press pp 444 445 ISBN 978 0 521 83307 3 Striano Araceli 2014 Doric In Giannakis Georgios K Bubenik Vit Crespo Emilio Golston Chris Lianeri Alexandra Luraghi Silvia Matthaios Stephanos eds Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics Vol 1 Brill Publishers pp 515 516 ISBN 978 9004225978 via Academia edu a b Buck Carl Darling 1900 The Source of the So Called Achaean Doric koinh American Journal of Philology 21 2 193 196 doi 10 2307 287905 JSTOR 287905 MultiTree A Digital Library of Language Relationships Tsakonian Archived from the original on 2018 10 03 Moseley Christopher 2007 Encyclopedia of the world s endangered languages New York Routledge s v Tsakonian Cabej E 1961 Die alteren Wohnsitze der Albaner auf der Balkanhalbinsel im Lichte der Sprache und der Ortsnamen VII Congresso Internaz Di Sciense Onomastiche 241 251 Albanian version BUShT 1962 1 219 227 Eric Hamp Birnbaum Henrik Puhvel Jaan eds The position of Albanian Ancient IE dialects Proceedings of the Conference on IE linguistics held at the University of California Los Angeles April 25 27 1963 Huld Martin E 1986 Accentual Stratification of Ancient Greek Loanwords in Albanian Zeitschrift fur vergleichende Sprachforschung 99 2 245 253 O Neil James 26th Conference of the Australasian Society for Classical Studies 2005 a b c d Panagiotis Filos 2017 The Dialectal Variety of Epirus In Georgios Giannakis Emilio Crespo Panagiotis Filos eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Berlin and Boston Walter de Gruyter p 227 The North West group together with Doric proper formed the so called West Greek major dialectal group or simply Doric However the term North West Doric is considered more accurate nowadays since there is more emphasis on the many features that are common to both groups rather than on their less numerous and largely secondary differences Los dialectos dorios del Noroeste Gramatica y estudio dialectal in Spanish Salamanca 1985 p 508 Panagiotis Filos 2017 The Dialectal Variety of Epirus In Georgios Giannakis Emilio Crespo Panagiotis Filos eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Berlin and Boston Walter de Gruyter p 230 Mendez Dosuna Doric dialects p 452 online at Google Books Goodwin William Watson 1874 Plutarch s Morals tr by several hands Corrected and revised by W W Goodwin Greek questions 9 IG IX 1 3 609 Die Inschriften von Olympia IvO 1 Sophie Minon Les Inscriptions Eleennes Dialectale reviewed by Stephen Colvin online Lamelles Oraculaires 77 John Potter 1751 Archaeologia Graeca Or the Antiquities of Greece C Strahan Cabanes L Epire de la mort de Pyrrhos a la conquete romaine 272 167 av J C Paris 1976 p 534 1 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 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1993 1989 The Macedonian State Origins Institutions and History reprint ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 814927 1 Michael Meier Brugger Indo European linguistics Walter de Gruyter Berlin and New York 2003 p 28 online on Google books The Macedonian of the ancient kingdom of northern Greece is probably nothing other than a northern Greek dialect of Doric 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 Olivier Masson 2003 1996 Macedonian language In Simon Hornblower Antony Spawforth eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary revised 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 905 906 ISBN 0 19 860641 9 Brian D Joseph 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 Online paper 2001 Johannes Engels Macedonians and Greeks p 95 In Joseph Roisman Ian Worthington A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Chapter 5 John Wiley amp Sons New York 2011 a b c 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 pp 321 322 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 Woodard Roger D ed 2008 The Ancient Languages of Europe Cambridge University Press between pages 49 and 50 ISBN 978 1 139 46932 6 Classification of the West Greek dialects at the time about 350 B C by Antonin Bartonek Amsterdam Adolf M Hakkert 1972 p 186 Vit Bubenik 2000 Variety of speech in Greek linguistics The dialects and the koine In Sylvain Auroux et al eds Geschichte der Sprachwissenschaften Ein internationales Handbuch zur Entwicklung der Sprachforschung von den Anfangen bis zur Gegenwart Vol Band 1 Berlin and New York Walter de Gruyter p 441 f ISBN 978 3 11 011103 3 a b c Panagiotis Filos 2017 The Dialectal Variety of Epirus In Georgios Giannakis Emilio Crespo Panagiotis Filos eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Berlin and Boston Walter de Gruyter pp 230 233 Vit Bubenik 1989 Hellenistic and Roman Greece as a Sociolinguistic Area Amsterdam pp 193 213 Wojciech Sowa 2018 The dialectology of Greek In Matthias Fritz Brian Joseph Jared Klein eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics De Gruyter Mouton p 715 ISBN 978 3 11 054036 9 In different regions of Greece however different sorts of koinai emerged of which the best known was the Doric Koine preserving general Doric features but without local differences and with an admixture of Attic forms As in the case of the Doric Koine the Northwest Koine connected with the so called Aetolian League displayed the same mixture of native dialectal elements with Attic elements S Minon 2014 Diffusion de l attique et expansion des koinai dans le Peloponnese et en Grece centrale Actes de la journee internationale de dialectologie grecque du 18 mars 2011 universite Paris Ouest Nanterre Geneva pp 1 18 Plutarch Greek question 51 Dionysism and Comedy 1 by Xavier Riu Raphael Kuhner Friedrich Blass Ausfuhrliche Grammatik der Griechischen Sprache 2 Elis Olympia bef c 500 450 BC IvO 7 Epeiros Dodona 4th c BC SEG 15 397 The Oracles of Zeus Dodona Olympia Ammon Page 261 3 by Herbert William Parke Epeiros Dodona 340 BC SEG 26 700 Trans Alexander the Great A Reader 4 by Ian Worthing Greek Mythography in the Roman World 5 By Alan Cameron Aspetides 6 cf Athenian secretary Aspetos son of Demostratos from Kytheros 340 BC 7 Pokorny aspetosFurther reading EditBakker Egbert J ed 2010 A companion to the Ancient Greek language Oxford Wiley Blackwell Cassio Albio Cesare 2002 The language of Doric comedy In The language of Greek comedy Edited by Anton Willi 51 83 Oxford Oxford University Press Colvin Stephen C 2007 A historical Greek reader Mycenaean to the koine Oxford Oxford University Press Horrocks Geoffrey 2010 Greek A history of the language and its speakers 2nd ed Oxford Wiley Blackwell Palmer Leonard R 1980 The Greek language London Faber amp Faber External links EditDoric Greek in Encyclopaedia Britannica Grammar of the Greek Language M1 Doric by Benjamin Franklin Fisk 1844 The Elements of Greek Grammar Doric by Richard Valpy Charles Anthon 1834 Doric Northwest Greek Brill s New Pauly Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doric Greek amp oldid 1132348327, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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