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Proto-Greek language

The Proto-Greek language (also known as Proto-Hellenic) is the Indo-European language which was the last common ancestor of all varieties of Greek, including Mycenaean Greek, the subsequent ancient Greek dialects (i.e., Attic, Ionic, Aeolic, Doric, Arcadocypriot, and ancient Macedonian—either a dialect or a closely related Hellenic language) and, ultimately, Koine, Byzantine and Modern Greek (along with its variants). Proto-Greek speakers entered Greece sometime between 2200 and 1900 BC,[1][2][4] with the diversification into a southern and a northern group beginning by approximately 1700 BC.[5][9][10][11][12][13]

Proto-Greek
Proto-Hellenic
Reconstruction ofHellenic languages / Ancient Greek dialects
RegionSouthern Balkan Peninsula
Era
  • 2200–1900 BC (appearance in the Greek peninsula)[1][2][3][4]
  • 1700 BC (diversification)[5]
Reconstructed
ancestor
Proto-Greek area of settlement (2200/2100-1900 B.C.) suggested by Katona (2000), Sakellariou (2016, 1980, 1975) and Phylaktopoulos (1975)
View about "Proto-Greek area" in the 3rd millennium BC, reconstructed by Vladimir I. Georgiev (1973 & 1981). The boundaries are based on the high concentration of archaic Greek place-names in the region in contrast to southern Greece which preserves many pre-Greek.[6][7] Modern consensus is that pre-Proto-Greek and other IE languages split from PIE only after 2500 BC, with proto-Greek forming in the proto-Greek area during the Early Helladic III period (~2200–2000 BC).[8]

Origins edit

Proto-Greek emerged from the diversification of the late Proto-Indo-European language (PIE), a process whose last phase gave rise to the later language families and occurred c. 2500 BC.[14] Pre-Proto-Greek, the Indo-European dialect from which Proto-Greek originated, emerged c. 2400 – c. 2200 BC in an area which bordered pre-Proto-Indo-Iranian to the east and pre-Proto-Armenian and pre-Proto-Phrygian to the west, at the eastern borders of southeastern Europe.[15][16] Speakers of what would become Proto-Greek migrated from their homeland (which could have been northeast of the Black Sea) throughout Europe, and reached Greece in a date set around the transition of the Early Bronze Age to the Middle Bronze Age.[17] The evolution of Proto-Greek could be considered within the context of an early Paleo-Balkan sprachbund that makes it difficult to delineate exact boundaries between individual languages.[18] The characteristically Greek representation of word-initial laryngeals by prothetic vowels is shared, for one, by the Armenian language, which also seems to share some other phonological and morphological peculiarities of Greek; this has led some linguists to propose a hypothetically closer relationship between Greek and Armenian, although evidence remains scant.[19]

In modern bibliography, models about the settlement and development of proto-Greek speakers in the Greek peninsula place it in the region in the period at the earliest around 2200–2000 BC during the Early Helladic III.[2][1] Asko Parpola and Christian Carpelan (2005) date the arrival of Proto-Greek speakers into the Greek peninsula to 2200 BC,[4]: 131  while Carl Blegen (1928) dates it to c. 1900 BC.[1]

A. L. Katona (2000) places the beginning of the migration of the Proto-Greek speakers from Ukraine towards the south c. 2400 – c. 2300 BC. Their proposed route of migration passed through Romania and the eastern Balkans to the Evros river valley from where their main body moved west.[20] As such Katona as well as M.V Sakellariou agree that the main body of Greek speakers settled in a region that included southwestern Illyria, Epirus, northwestern Thessaly and western Macedonia.[21] Older theories like those of Vladimir I. Georgiev placed Proto-Greek in northwestern Greece and adjacent areas (approximately up to the Aulon river to the north including Parauaea, Tymphaia, Athamania, Dolopia, Amphilochia, and Acarnania, as well as west and north Thessaly (Histiaeotis, Perrhaibia, Tripolis), and Pieria in Macedonia, during the Late Neolithic.[6][22][23][24] However, the dating of proto-Greek in Bronze Age Greece is compatible with the inherited lexicon from the common Proto-Indo-European language which excludes any possibility of it being present in Neolithic Greece.[25][26]

Diversification edit

Ivo Hajnal dates the beginning of the diversification of Proto-Greek into the subsequent Greek dialects to a point not significantly earlier than 1700 BC.[5] The conventional division of the Greek dialects prior of 1955 differentiated them between a West Greek (consisting of Doric and Northwest Greek) and an East Greek (consisting of Aeolic, Arcado-Cypriot, and Attic-Ionic) group. However, after the decipherment of the Linear B script, Walter Porzig and Ernst Risch argued for a division between a Northern (consisting of Doric, Northwest Greek, and Aeolic) and a Southern (consisting of Mycenaean, Arcado-Cypriot, and Attic-Ionic) group, which remains fundamental through today.[9][10][11][12]

Phonology edit

Proto-Greek is reconstructed with the following phonemes:

  1. ^ a b c d e Occurs geminated only as the result of palatalization ČČ < Cy; ť also occurs in the combination < py
  2. ^ a b c Exact phonetic value uncertain

Proto-Greek changes edit

The primary sound changes separating Proto-Greek from the Proto-Indo-European language include the following.

Consonants edit

  • Delabialization of labiovelars next to /u/, the "boukólos rule". This was a phonotactic restriction already in Proto-Indo-European, and continued to be productive in Proto-Greek. It ceased to be in effect when labiovelars disappeared from the language in post-Proto-Greek.
  • Centumization: Merger of palatovelars and velars.[27]
  • Merging of sequences of velar + *w into the labiovelars, perhaps with compensatory lengthening of the consonant in one case: PIE *h₁éḱwos > PG *híkkʷos > Mycenaean i-qo /híkkʷos/, Attic híppos, Aeolic íkkos.
  • Debuccalization of /s/ to /h/ in intervocalic and prevocalic positions (between two vowels, or if word-initial and followed by a vowel).[27] Loss of prevocalic *s was not completed entirely, evidenced by sȳ́s ~ hȳ́s "pig" (from PIE *suh₁-), dasýs "dense" and dásos "dense growth, forest"; *som "with" is another example, contaminated with PIE *ḱom (Latin cum; preserved in Greek kaí, katá, koinós) to Mycenaean ku-su /ksun/, Homeric and Old Attic ksýn, later sýn. Furthermore, sélas "light in the sky, as in the aurora" and selḗnē/selā́nā "moon" may be more examples of the same if it derived from PIE *swel- "to burn" (possibly related to hḗlios "sun", Ionic hēélios < *sāwélios).
  • Strengthening of word-initial y- to dy- > dz- (note that Hy- > Vy- regularly due to vocalization of laryngeals).
  • Filos[27] argues for a "probable" early loss of final non-nasal[28] stop consonants: compare Latin quid and Sanskrit cid with Greek ti; however, Mycenaean texts are inconclusive in offering evidence on this matter, as the Linear B script did not explicitly mark final consonants.[27] However, it appears that these stops were preserved word finally for unstressed words, reflected in ek "out of".[28]
  • Final /m/ > /n/.
  • Syllabic resonants *m̥ *n̥ *l̥ and *r̥ that are not followed by a laryngeal are resolved to vowels or combinations of a vowel and consonantal resonant. This resulted in an epenthetic vowel of undetermined quality (denoted here as ). This vowel then usually developed into a but also o in some cases. Thus:[29]
    • *m̥, *n̥ > , but > *əm, *ən before a sonorant. appears as o in Mycenaean after a labial: pe-mo (spérmo) "seed" vs. usual spérma < *spérmn̥. Similarly, o often appears in Arcadian after a velar, e.g. déko "ten", hekotón "one hundred" vs. usual déka, hekatón < *déḱm̥, *sem-ḱm̥tóm.
    • *l̥, *r̥ > *lə, *rə, but *əl, *ər before sonorants and analogously. appears as o in Mycenaean, Aeolic and Arcadocypriot. Example: PIE *str̥-tos > usual stratós, Aeolic strótos "army"; post-PIE *ḱr̥di-eh₂ "heart" > Attic kardíā, Homeric kradíē, Pamphylian korzdia.
Changes to the aspirates edit

Major changes included:

  • Devoicing of voiced aspirates *bʰ, *dʰ, *ɡʰ, *ɡʷʰ to *pʰ, *tʰ, *kʰ, *kʷʰ.[27] This change preceded and fed both stages of palatalization.
  • Loss of aspiration before *s, e.g. heksō "I will have" < Post-PIE *seǵʰ-s-oh₂.
  • Loss of aspiration before *y, detailed under "palatalization".

Grassmann's law was a process of dissimilation in words containing multiple aspirates. It caused an initial aspirated sound to lose its aspiration when a following aspirated consonant occurred in the same word. It was a relatively late change in Proto-Greek history, and must have occurred independently[28] of the similar dissimilation of aspirates (also known as Grassmann's law) in Indo-Iranian, although it may represent a common areal feature. The change may have even been post-Mycenaean:[27]

  1. It postdates the Greek-specific de-voicing of voiced aspirates;
  2. It postdates the change of /s/ > /h/, which is then lost in the same environment: ékhō "I have" < *hekh- < PIE *seǵʰ-oh₂, but future heksō "I will have" < *heks- < Post-PIE *seǵʰ-s-oh₂;
  3. It postdates even the loss of aspiration before *y that accompanied second-stage palatalization (see below), which postdates both of the previous changes (as well as first-stage palatalization);
  4. On the other hand, it predates the development of the first aorist passive marker -thē- since the aspirate in that marker has no effect on preceding aspirates.
Laryngeal changes edit

Greek is unique among Indo-European languages in reflecting the three different laryngeals with distinct vowels. Most Indo-European languages can be traced back to a dialectal variety of late Proto-Indo-European (PIE) in which all three laryngeals had merged (after colouring adjacent short /e/ vowels), but Greek clearly cannot. For that reason, Greek is extremely important in reconstructing PIE forms.

Greek shows distinct reflexes of the laryngeals in various positions:

  • Most famously, between consonants, where original vocalic *h₁, *h₂, *h₃ are reflected as /e/, /a/, /o/ respectively (the so-called triple reflex). All other Indo-European languages reflect the same vowel from all three laryngeals (usually /a/, but /i/ or other vowels in Indo-Iranian):
Proto-Indo-European Greek Vedic Sanskrit Latin
*dʰh₁s- "sacred, religious" θέσφατος (thésphatos) "decreed by God" धिष्ण्य (dhíṣṇya-) "devout" fānum "temple" < *fasnom < *dʰh̥₁s-no-
*sth₂-to- "standing, being made to stand" στατός (statós) स्थित (sthíta-) status
*dh₃-ti- "gift" δόσις (dósis) दिति (díti-) datiō
  • An initial laryngeal before a consonant (a *HC- sequence) leads to the same triple reflex, but most IE languages lost such laryngeals and a few reflect them initially before consonants. Greek vocalized them (leading to what are misleadingly termed prothetic vowels): Greek érebos "darkness" < PIE *h₁regʷos vs. Gothic riqiz- "darkness"; Greek áent- "wind" < *awent- < PIE *h₂wéh₁n̥t- vs. English wind, Latin ventus "wind", Breton gwent "wind".
  • The sequence *CRHC (C = consonant, R = resonant, H = laryngeal) becomes CRēC, CRāC, CRōC from H = *h₁, *h₂, *h₃ respectively. (Other Indo-European languages again have the same reflex for all three laryngeals: *CuRC in Proto-Germanic, *CiRˀC/CuRˀC with acute register in Proto-Balto-Slavic, *CīRC/CūRC in Proto-Indo-Iranian, *CRāC in Proto-Italic and Proto-Celtic.) Sometimes, CeReC, CaRaC, CoRoC are found instead: Greek thánatos "death" vs. Doric Greek thnātós "mortal", both apparently reflecting *dʰn̥h₂-tos. It is sometimes suggested that the position of the accent was a factor in determining the outcome.
  • The sequence *CiHC tends to become *CyēC, *CyāC, *CyōC from H = *h₁, *h₂, *h₃ respectively, with later palatalization (see below). Sometimes, the outcome CīC is found, as in most other Indo-European languages, or the outcome CiaC in the case of *Cih₂C.

All of the cases may stem from an early insertion of /e/ next to a laryngeal not adjacent to a vowel in the Indo-European dialect ancestral to Greek (subsequently coloured to /e/, /a/, /o/ by the particular laryngeal in question) prior to the general merger of laryngeals:

  • *CHC > *CHeC > CeC/CaC/CoC.
  • *HC- > *HeC- > eC-/aC-/oC-.
  • *CRHC > *CReHC > CRēC/CRāC/CRōC; or, *CRHC > *CeRHeC > *CeReC/CeRaC/CeRoC > CeReC/CaRaC/CoRoC by assimilation.
  • *CiHC > *CyeHC > CyēC/CyāC/CyōC; or, *Cih₂C > *Cih₂eC > *CiHaC > *CiyaC > CiaC; or, *CiHC remains without vowel insertion > CīC.

A laryngeal adjacent to a vowel develops along the same lines as other Indo-European languages:

  • The sequence *CRHV (C = consonant, R = resonant, H = laryngeal, V = vowel) passes through *CR̥HV, becoming CaRV.
  • The sequence *CeHC becomes CēC/CāC/CōC.
  • The sequence *CoHC becomes CōC.
  • In the sequence *CHV (including CHR̥C, with a vocalized resonant), the laryngeal colours a following short /e/, as expected, but it otherwise disappears entirely (as in most other Indo-European languages but not Indo-Iranian whose laryngeal aspirates a previous stop and prevents the operation of Brugmann's law).
  • In a *VHV sequence (a laryngeal between vowels, including a vocalic resonant ), the laryngeal again colours any adjacent short /e/ but otherwise vanishes early on. That change appears to be uniform across the Indo-European languages and was probably the first environment in which laryngeals were lost. If the first V was *i, *u or a vocalic resonant, a consonantal copy was apparently inserted in place of the laryngeal: *CiHV > *CiyV, *CuHV > *CuwV, *CR̥HV possibly > *CR̥RV, with always remaining as vocalic until the dissolution of vocalic resonants in the various daughter languages. Otherwise, a hiatus resulted, which was resolved in various ways in the daughter languages, typically by converting i, u and vocalic resonants, when it directly followed a vowel, back into a consonant and merging adjacent non-high vowels into a single long vowel.
Palatalization edit

Consonants followed by consonantal *y were palatalized, producing various affricate consonants (still represented as a separate sound in Mycenaean) and geminated palatal consonants.[27] Any aspiration was lost in the process. The palatalized consonants later simplified, mostly losing their palatal character. Palatalization occurred in two separate stages. The first stage affected only dental consonants, and the second stage affected all consonants.

First palatalization edit

The first palatalization caused dentals + *y to ultimately become alveolar affricates:

Before After
*ty, *tʰy *t͡s
*dy *d͡z

The affricate derived from the first palatalization of *ty and *tʰy merged with the outcome of the inherited clusters *ts, *ds and *tʰs, all becoming *t͡s.[30]

Restoration edit

After the first palatalization changed *ty and *tʰy into *t͡s, the consonant *y was restored after original *t or *tʰ in morphologically transparent formations. The initial outcome of restoration may have been simply *ty and *tʰy, or alternatively, restoration may have yielded an affricate followed by a glide, *t͡sy, in the case of both original *t and original *tʰ.[31] Either way, restored *t(ʰ)y would go on to merge via the second palatalization with the reflex of *k(ʰ)y, resulting in a distinct outcome from the *t͡s derived from the first palatalization.[31] There may also have been restoration of *y after original *d in the same circumstances, but if so, it apparently merged with the *d͡z that resulted from the first palatalization before leaving any visible trace.[31]

However, restoration is not evident in Mycenaean Greek, where the reflex of original *t(ʰ)y (which became a consonant transcribed as ⟨s⟩) is consistently written differently from the reflex of original *k(ʰ)y (which became a consonant transcribed as ⟨z⟩ via the second palatalization).[31]

Second palatalization edit

The second palatalization affected all consonants. It took place following the resolution of syllabic laryngeals and sonorants, and prior to Grassmann's law.

The following table, based on American linguist Andrew Sihler,[32] shows the outcomes of the second palatalization.

Before After
*py, *pʰy *pť
*ty, *tʰy (or *t͡sy) *ťť
*ky, *kʰy
*kʷy, *kʷʰy
(*d͡zy) *ďď
*gy
*gʷy
*ly *ľľ
*my, *ny *ňň
*ry *řř
*sy > *hy *yy
*wy *ɥɥ > *yy

Sihler reconstructs the palatalized stops (shown in the above table as ) with a degree of assibilation and transcribes them as .[33]

The resulting palatal consonants and clusters of Proto-Greek were resolved in varying ways prior to the historical period. Most notably, and were resolved into plain sonorants plus a palatal on-glide, which eventually turned the preceding vowel into a diphthong.

Proto-Greek Attic Homeric West Ionic Other Ionic Boeotian Arcado-
Cypriot
Other
*pť pt
*t͡s s s, ss s tt ss
*ťť tt ss tt ss tt ss
*d͡z, *ďď zd
*ľľ ll il ll
*ňň in (but *uňň > ūn)
*řř ir (but *uřř > ūr)
*yy i

The restoration of *y after original *t or *tʰ (resulting in *ťť) occurred only in morphologically transparent formations, by analogy with similar formations in which *y was preceded by other consonants. In formations that were morphologically opaque, the restoration did not take place and the *t͡s that resulted from the first palatalization of *ty and *tʰy remained. Hence, depending on the type of formation, the pre-Proto-Greek sequences *ty and *tʰy have different outcomes in the later languages. In particular, medial *t(ʰ)y becomes Attic -s- in opaque formations but -tt- in transparent formations.

The outcome of PG medial *ts in Homeric Greek is s after a long vowel, and vacillation between s and ss after a short vowel: tátēsi dat. pl. "rug" < tátēt-, possí(n)/posí(n) dat. pl. "foot" < pod-. This was useful for the composer of the Iliad and Odyssey, since possí with double s scans as long-short, while posí with single s scans as short-short. Thus the writer could use each form in different positions in a line.

Examples of initial *t͡s:

  • PIE *tyegʷ- "avoid" > PG *t͡segʷ- > Greek sébomai "worship, be respectful" (Ved. tyaj- "flee")
  • PIE *dʰyeh₂- "notice" > PG *t͡sā- > Dor. sā́ma, Att. sêma "sign" (Ved. dhyā́- "thought, contemplation")

Examples of medial *t͡s (morphologically opaque forms, first palatalization only):

  • PreG *tótyos "as much" > PG *tót͡sos > Att. tósos, Hom. tósos/tóssos (cf. Ved. táti, Lat. tot "so much/many")
  • PIE *médʰyos "middle" > PG *mét͡sos > Att. mésos, Hom. mésos/méssos, Boeot. méttos, other dial. mésos (cf. Ved. mádhya-, Lat. medius)

Examples of medial *ťť (morphologically transparent forms, first and second palatalization):

  • PIE *h₁erh₁-t-yoh₂ "I row" > PG *eréťťō > Attic eréttō, usual non-Attic eréssō (cf. erétēs "oarsman")
  • PIE *krét-yōs > PreG *krétyōn "better" > PG *kréťťōn > Attic kreíttōn,[34] usual non-Attic kréssōn (cf. kratús "strong" < PIE *kr̥tús)

For words with original *dy, no distinction is found in any historically attested form of Greek between the outcomes of the first and second palatalizations, and so there is no visible evidence of an opposition between *d͡z and a secondary restored cluster *d͡zy > *ďď. However, it is reasonable to think that words with *dy originally underwent parallel treatment to words with original *ty and *tʰy.[35] The reflex of *dy also merged with the reflex of *g(ʷ)y, with one of the two word-initial reflexes of PIE *y-, and with original *sd, as in PIE *h₃esdos/osdos > όζος 'branch' or PIE *si-sd- > ἵζω 'take a seat'.[36] The merger with *sd was probably post-Mycenaean, but occurred before the introduction of the Greek alphabet.[37]

Vowels edit

Cowgill's law edit

In Proto-Greek, Cowgill's law[38] says that a former /o/ vowel becomes /u/ between a resonant (/r/, /l/, /m/, /n/) and a labial consonant (including labiovelars), in either order.

Examples:

Note that when a labiovelar adjoins an /o/ affected by Cowgill's law, the new /u/ will cause the labiovelar to lose its labial component (as in Greek: núks and Greek: ónuks/ónukh-, where the usual Greek change */kʷ/ > /p/ has not occurred).

Prosody edit

Proto-Greek retained the Indo-European pitch accent, but developed a number of rules governing it:[39]

  • The law of limitation, also known as the trisyllabicity law, confined the freedom of the accents to the final three syllables. Alternatively, it can be analyzed as restraining the accent to be within the last four morae of the word.
  • Wheeler's Law, which also developed during Proto-Greek, causes oxytone words to become paroxytone when ending in a syllable sequence consisting of heavy-light-light (ex. *poikilós > poikílos).
  • Loss of accent in finite verb forms. This probably began in verbs of independent clauses, a development also seen in Vedic Sanskrit, where they behave as clitics and bear no accent.[40] The accentless forms later acquired a default recessive accent, placed as far left as the law of limitation allowed.
    • Certain imperative forms, such as idé "go!", regularly escaped this process and retained their accent.
  • Many Proto-Greek suffixes bore lexical stress. Accentuation rules applied post-Proto-Greek such as Vendryes's Law and Bartoli's Law modified how and if this would surface.[39]

Post-Proto-Greek changes edit

Sound changes that postdate Proto-Greek, but predate the attested dialects, including Mycenaean Greek, include:

  • Loss of s in consonant clusters, with compensatory lengthening of the preceding vowel (Attic, Ionic, Doric) or of the consonant (Aeolic): *ésmi "I am" > ḗmi, eîmi or émmi.
  • Creation of secondary s from earlier affricates, *nty > *nts > ns. This was, in turn, followed by a change similar to the one described above, loss of the n with compensatory lengthening: *apónt-ya > apónsa > apoûsa, "absent", feminine.
  • In southern dialects (including Mycenaean, but not Doric), -ti- > -si- (assibilation).

The following changes are apparently post-Mycenaean because early stages are represented in Linear B:

  • Loss of /h/ (from original /s/), except initially, e.g. Doric níkaas "having conquered" < *níkahas < *níkasas.
  • Loss of /j/, e.g. treîs "three" < *tréyes.
  • Loss of /w/ in many dialects (later than loss of /h/ and /j/). Example: étos "year" from *wétos.
  • Loss of labiovelars, which were converted (mostly) into labials, sometimes into dentals (or velars next to /u/, as a result of an earlier sound change). See below for details. It had not yet happened in Mycenaean, as is shown by the fact that a separate letter q is used for such sounds.
  • Contraction of adjacent vowels resulting from loss of /h/ and /j/ (and, to a lesser extent, from loss of /w/); more in Attic Greek than elsewhere.
  • Rise of a distinctive circumflex accent, resulting from contraction and certain other changes.
  • Loss of /n/ before /s/ (incompletely in Cretan Greek), with compensatory lengthening of the preceding vowel.
  • Raising of ā to ē /ɛː/ in Attic and Ionic dialects (but not Doric). In Ionic, the change was general, but in Attic it did not occur after /i/, /e/ or /r/. (Note Attic kórē "girl" < *kórwā; loss of /w/ after /r/ had not occurred at that point in Attic.)
  • Vendryes's Law in Attic, where a penultimate circumflex accent was retracted onto a preceding light syllable if the final syllable was also light: light-circumflex-light > acute-heavy-light. For example, hetoîmos > Attic hétoimos.
  • Analogical prosodic changes that converted a penultimate heavy acute accent to circumflex (retraction by one mora) if both the final and (if present) the preceding syllable were light.[41] This produced alternations within a paradigm, for example Attic oînos "wine" nominative singular, but genitive singular oínou.

Note that /w/ and /j/, when following a vowel and not preceding a vowel, combined early on with the vowel to form a diphthong and so were not lost.

Loss of /h/ and /w/ after a consonant was often accompanied by compensatory lengthening of a preceding vowel.

The development of labiovelars varies from dialect to dialect:

  • Due to the PIE boukólos rule, labiovelars next to /u/ had already been converted to plain velars: boukólos "herdsman" < *gʷou-kʷólos (cf. boûs "cow" < *gʷou-) vs. aipólos "goatherd" < *ai(g)-kʷólos (cf. aíks, gen. aigós "goat"); elakhús "small" < *h₁ln̥gʷʰ-ús vs. elaphrós "light" < *h₁ln̥gʷʰ-rós.
  • In Attic and some other dialects (but not, for example, Aeolic), labiovelars before some front vowels became dentals. In Attic, and kʷʰ became t and th, respectively, before /e/ and /i/, while became d before /e/ (but not /i/). Cf. theínō "I strike, kill" < *gʷʰen-yō vs. phónos "slaughter" < *gʷʰón-os; delphús "womb" < *gʷelbʰ- (Sanskrit garbha-) vs. bíos "life" < *gʷih₃wos (Gothic qius "alive"), tís "who?" < *kʷis (Latin quis).
  • All remaining labiovelars became labials, original kʷ kʷʰ gʷ becoming p ph b respectively. That happened to all labiovelars in some dialects like Lesbian; in other dialects, like Attic, it occurred to all labiovelars not converted into dentals. Many occurrences of dentals were later converted into labials by analogy with other forms: bélos "missile", bélemnon "spear, dart" (dialectal délemnon) by analogy with bállō "I throw (a missile, etc.)", bolḗ "a blow with a missile".
  • Original PIE labiovelars had still remained as such even before consonants and so became labials also there. In many other centum languages such as Latin and most Germanic languages, the labiovelars lost their labialisation before consonants. (Greek pémptos "fifth" < *pénkʷtos; compare Old Latin quinctus.) This makes Greek of particular importance in reconstructing original labiovelars.

The results of vowel contraction were complex from dialect to dialect. Such contractions occur in the inflection of a number of different noun and verb classes and are among the most difficult aspects of Ancient Greek grammar. They were particularly important in the large class of contracted verbs, denominative verbs formed from nouns and adjectives ending in a vowel. (In fact, the reflex of contracted verbs in Modern Greek, the set of verbs derived from Ancient Greek contracted verbs, represents one of the two main classes of verbs in that language.)

Morphology edit

Noun edit

Proto-Greek preserved the gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and number (singular, dual, plural) distinctions of the nominal system of Proto-Indo-European.[42] However, the evidence from Mycenaean Greek is inconclusive with regard to whether all eight cases continued to see complete usage, but this is more secure for the five standard cases of Classical Greek (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative and vocative) and probably also the instrumental in its usual plural suffix -pʰi and the variant /-ṓis/ for o-stem nouns.[39] The ablative and locative are uncertain; at the time of Mycenaean texts they may have been undergoing a merger with the genitive and dative respectively.[39] It is thought that the syncretism between cases proceeded faster for the plural,[39] with dative and locative already merged as -si (the Proto-Indo-European locative plural having been *-su-).[43][39] This merger may have been motivated by analogy to the locative singular -i-.[39] Nevertheless, seven case distinctions are securely attested in Mycenaean in some domain, with the status of the ablative unclear.[44]

Significant developments attributed to the Proto-Greek period include:

  • the replacement of PIE nominative plural *-ās and *-ōs by *-ai and *-oi.[39]
  • the genitive and dative dual suffix *-oi(i)n (Arcadian -oiun) appears to be exclusive to Greek.[39]
  • Genitive singular Proto-Indo-European *-āsyo is reflected as -āo[39]

The Proto-Greek nominal system is thought to have included cases of gender change according to number, heteroclisy and stem alternation (ex. genitive form húdatos for húdōr "water").[39]

The superlative in -tatos becomes productive.[citation needed]

The peculiar oblique stem gunaik- "women", attested from the Thebes tablets is probably Proto-Greek. It appears, at least as gunai- in Armenian as well.[citation needed]

Pronoun edit

The pronouns hoûtos, ekeînos and autós are created. The use of ho, hā, to as articles is post-Mycenaean.

Verb edit

Proto-Greek inherited the augment, a prefix e-, to verbal forms expressing past tense. That feature is shared only with Indo-Iranian and Phrygian (and to some extent, Armenian), lending some support to a "Graeco-Aryan" or "Inner PIE" proto-dialect. However, the augment down to the time of Homer remained optional and was probably little more than a free sentence particle, meaning "previously" in the proto-language, which may easily have been lost by most other branches. Greek, Phrygian, and Indo-Iranian also concur in the absence of r-endings in the middle voice, in Greek apparently already lost in Proto-Greek.

The first person middle verbal desinences -mai, -mān replace -ai, -a. The third singular phérei is an innovation by analogy, replacing the expected Doric *phéreti, Ionic *phéresi (from PIE *bʰéreti).

The future tense is created, including a future passive as well as an aorist passive.

The suffix -ka- is attached to some perfects and aorists.

Infinitives in -ehen, -enai and -men are created.

Numerals edit

Proto-Greek numerals were derived directly from Indo-European.[27]

  • "one": *héns (masculine), *hmía (feminine) (> Myc. e-me /heméi/ (dative); Att./Ion. εἷς (ἑνός), μία, heîs (henos), mía)
  • "two": *dúwō (> Myc. du-wo /dúwoː/; Hom. δύω, dúō; Att.-Ion. δύο, dúo)
  • "three": *tréyes (> Myc. ti-ri /trins/; Att./Ion. τρεῖς, treîs; Lesb. τρής, trḗs; Cret. τρέες, trées)
  • "four": nominative *kʷétwores, genitive *kʷeturṓn (> Myc. qe-to-ro-we /kʷétroːwes/ "four-eared"; Att. τέτταρες, téttares; Ion. τέσσερες, tésseres; Boeot. πέτταρες, péttares; Thess. πίτταρες, píttares; Lesb. πίσυρες, písures; Dor. τέτορες, tétores)
  • "five": *pénkʷe (> Att.-Ion. πέντε, pénte; Lesb., Thess. πέμπε, pémpe)
  • "six": *hwéks (> Att. ἕξ, héks; Dor. ϝέξ, wéks)
  • "seven": *heptə́ (> Att. ἑπτά, heptá)
  • "eight": *oktṓ (> Att. ὀκτώ, oktṓ)
  • "nine": *ennéwə (> Att. ἐννέα, ennéa; Dor. ἐννῆ, ennê)
  • "ten": *dékə (> Att. δέκα, déka)
  • "hundred": *hekətón (> Att. ἑκατόν, hekatón)
  • "thousand": *kʰéhliyoi (> Att. χίλιοι, khílioi)

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Drews, Robert (1994). The Coming of the Greeks: Indo-European Conquests in the Aegean and the Near East. Princeton University Press. p. 14. ISBN 0-691-02951-2.
  2. ^ a b c West, M. L. (23 October 1997). The East Face of Helicon: West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth: West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth. Clarendon Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-19-159104-4. from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 28 September 2020. "the arrival of the Proto-Greek -speakers took place at various sites in central and southern Greece at the beginning and end of the Early Helladic III period.
  3. ^ Filos, Panagiotis (2014). "Proto-Greek and Common Greek". In Giannakis, G. K. (ed.). Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III. Leiden-Boston: Brill. p. 175. from the original on 2022-04-08. Retrieved 2020-08-20.
  4. ^ a b c Asko Parpola; Christian Carpelan (2005). "The cultural counterparts to Proto-Indo-European, Proto-Uralic and Proto-Aryan : matching the dispersal and contact patterns in the linguistic and archaeological record". In Edwin Bryant; Laurie L. Patton (eds.). The Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History. Psychology Press. pp. 107–141. ISBN 978-0-7007-1463-6. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2020-08-21.
  5. ^ a b c Hajnal, Ivo (2007). "Die Vorgeschichte der griechischen Dialekte: ein methodischer Rück- und Ausblick". In Hajnal, Ivo; Stefan, Barbara (eds.). Die altgriechischen Dialekte. Wesen und Werden. Akten des Kolloquiums, Freie Universität Berlin, 19.–22. September 2001 (in German). Innsbruck, Austria: Institut für Sprachen und Literaturen der Universität Innsbruck. p. 136. from the original on 2021-10-28. Retrieved 2020-05-06.
  6. ^ a b Georgiev 1981, p. 156: "The Proto-Greek region included Epirus, approximately up to Αὐλών in the north including Paravaia, Tymphaia, Athamania, Dolopia, Amphilochia, and Acarnania), west and north Thessaly (Hestiaiotis, Perrhaibia, Tripolis, and Pieria), i. e. more or less the territory of contemporary northwestern Greece)."
  7. ^ Crossland, R. A.; Birchall, Ann (1973). Bronze Age Migrations in the Aegean; Archaeological and Linguistic Problems in Greek Prehistory: Proceedings of the First International Colloquium on Aegean Prehistory, Sheffield. Duckworth. p. 248. ISBN 978-0-7156-0580-6. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2021-02-11. Thus in the region defined just above, roughly northern and north-western Greece, one finds only archaic Greek place-names. Consequently, this is the proto-Hellenic area, the early homeland of the Greeks where they lived before they invaded central and southern Greece.
  8. ^ Anthony 2010, p. 82.
  9. ^ a b Hall, Jonathan M. (1997). Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity. Cambridge University Press. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-521-78999-8. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2021-02-11.
  10. ^ a b Woodard, Roger D. (2008). The Ancient Languages of Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-139-46932-6. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2021-02-11.
  11. ^ a b Horrocks, Geoffrey (2010). Greek: A History of the Language and its Speakers. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 19–20. ISBN 978-1-4443-1892-0. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2021-02-11.
  12. ^ a b Parker, Holt N. (2008). "The Linguistic Case for the Aiolian Migration Reconsidered". Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 77 (3): 443–444. doi:10.2972/hesp.77.3.431. ISSN 0018-098X. JSTOR 40205757. S2CID 161497388.
  13. ^ A comprehensive overview is in J. T. Hooker's Mycenaean Greece (Hooker 1976, Chapter 2: "Before the Mycenaean Age", pp. 11–33 and passim); for a different hypothesis excluding massive migrations and favoring an autochthonous scenario, see Colin Renfrew's "Problems in the General Correlation of Archaeological and Linguistic Strata in Prehistoric Greece: The Model of Autochthonous Origin" (Renfrew 1973, pp. 263–276, especially p. 267) in Bronze Age Migrations by R. A. Crossland and A. Birchall, eds. (1973).
  14. ^ Anthony 2010, p. 81.
  15. ^ Anthony 2010, pp. 51.
  16. ^ Anthony 2010, pp. 369.
  17. ^ Demand, Nancy (2012). The Mediterranean Context of Early Greek History. Wiley. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-4051-5551-9. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2020-08-20.
  18. ^ Renfrew 2003, p. 35: "Greek The fragmentation of the Balkan Proto-Indo-European Sprachbund of phase II around 3000 BC led gradually in the succeeding centuries to the much clearer definition of the languages of the constituent sub-regions."
  19. ^ Clackson 1995.
  20. ^ Katona 2000, p. 84: "The time of the departure of the Proto-Greeks semel is mid EH II (2400/2300 B.C) (L and A available). Their route between Ukraine and Greece can be supposed to have led through Rumania and East Balkans towards the Hebros-vallev (North-Eastern Greece). Here they turned to the West (A available)."
  21. ^ Katona 2000, pp. 84–86: "Contacts must have existed, too, until 1900 B.C., when Western tribes lived in Epirus, Southwest Illyria and Western Macedonia, i.e. in the western neighborhood of the Ionians... The main body of the Proto-Greeks – as seen already in Sakellariou 1980 – had settled in southwest Illyria, Epirus, Western Macedonia, and northwestern Thessaly."
  22. ^ Georgiev 1981, p. 192: "Late Neolithic Period: in northwestern Greece the Proto-Greek language had already been formed: this is the original home of the Greeks."
  23. ^ Coleman 2000, pp. 101–153.
  24. ^ Feuer, Bryan (2 March 2004). Mycenaean Civilization: An Annotated Bibliography through 2002, rev. ed. McFarland. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-7864-1748-3. from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 28 September 2020. Supports an interpretation of Marija Gimbutas' Kurgan theory involving the migration of a proto-Greek population which arrived in Greece during the Early Helladic period.
  25. ^ Mallory, J.P. (2003). "The Homeland of the Indo-Europeans". In Blench, Roger; Spriggs, Matthew (eds.). Archaeology and Language I: Theoretical and Methodological Orientations. Routledge. p. 101. ISBN 1-134-82877-2. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2020-08-20.
  26. ^ Anthony 2010, p. 81.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i Filos, Panagiotis "Proto-Greek and Common Greek". In G. K. Giannakis et al. (eds.), Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III, Leiden-Boston 2014: Brill: 175–189 section 4c.
  28. ^ a b c Benjamin W. Fortson IV (2004). Indo-European Language and Culture. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. p. 227.
  29. ^ Filos, p. 178.
  30. ^ Sihler 1995, p. 190.
  31. ^ a b c d Sihler 1995, p. 191.
  32. ^ Sihler 1995, p. 189-196.
  33. ^ Sihler 1995, p. 192.
  34. ^ Lengthened -ei /eː/ due to Attic analogical lengthening in comparatives.
  35. ^ Sihler 1995, pp. 191–192.
  36. ^ Sihler 1995, pp. 194.
  37. ^ Teodorsson, Sven-Tage (1979). "On the Pronunciation of Ancient Greek Zeta". Lingua. 47 (4): 323–332. doi:10.1016/0024-3841(79)90078-0.
  38. ^ Sihler 1995, pp. 42–43.
  39. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Filos, Panagiotis (2014). "Proto-Greek and Common Greek". In Giannakis, G. K. (ed.). Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III. Leiden-Boston: Brill. p. 180. from the original on 2022-04-08. Retrieved 2020-08-20.
  40. ^ Sihler 1995.
  41. ^ Sihler 1995.
  42. ^ Filos, Panagiotis (2014). "Proto-Greek and Common Greek". In Giannakis, G. K. (ed.). Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III. Leiden-Boston: Brill. pp. 180–181. from the original on 2022-04-08. Retrieved 2020-08-20.
  43. ^ Benjamin W. Fortson IV (2004). Indo-European Language and Culture. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. p. 226.
  44. ^ Ramón, José Luis García (2017). "The morphology of Greek". In Klein, Joseph and Fritz (2017), Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics. Page 654.

Sources edit

  • Anthony, David (2010). The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-3110-4.
  • Buck, Carl Darling (1933). Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Clackson, James (1995). The Linguistic Relationship Between Armenian and Greek. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-19197-1. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2016-05-21.
  • Coleman, John E. (2000). "An Archaeological Scenario for the "Coming of the Greeks" ca. 3200 B.C." The Journal of Indo-European Studies. 28 (1–2): 101–153. from the original on 2022-03-08. Retrieved 2018-06-01.
  • Fortson, Benjamin W. IV (2004). Indo-European Language and Culture. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 1-4051-0316-7. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2016-02-23.
  • Georgiev, Vladimir Ivanov (1981). Introduction to the History of the Indo-European Languages. Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. ISBN 978-953-51-7261-1. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2016-02-23.
  • Hooker, J.T. (1976). Mycenaean Greece. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0-7100-8379-1.
  • Katona, A. L. (2000). "Proto-Greeks and the Kurgan Theory" (PDF). The Journal of Indo-European Studies. (PDF) from the original on 2021-01-26. Retrieved 2021-01-22.
  • Renfrew, Colin (1973). "Problems in the General Correlation of Archaeological and Linguistic Strata in Prehistoric Greece: The Model of Autochthonous Origin". In Crossland, R. A.; Birchall, Ann (eds.). Bronze Age Migrations in the Aegean; Archaeological and Linguistic Problems in Greek Prehistory: Proceedings of the first International Colloquium on Aegean Prehistory, Sheffield. London: Gerald Duckworth and Company Limited. pp. 263–276. ISBN 0-7156-0580-1.
  • Renfrew, Colin (2003). "Time Depth, Convergence Theory, and Innovation in Proto-Indo-European: 'Old Europe' as a PIE Linguistic Area". In Bammesberger, Alfred; Vennemann, Theo (eds.). Languages in Prehistoric Europe. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter GmBH. pp. 17–48. ISBN 978-3-82-531449-1. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2016-04-15.
  • Schwyzer, Eduard (1939). Griechische Grammatik: auf der Grundlage von Karl Brugmanns Griechischer Grammatik (in German). Munich: C.H. Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-03397-1.
  • Sihler, Andrew L. (1995). New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-508345-8. from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2016-02-23.
  • Filos, Panagiotis (2014). "Proto-Greek and Common Greek". In Giannakis, G. K. (ed.). Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III. Leiden-Boston: Brill. p. 175. from the original on 2022-04-08. Retrieved 2020-08-20.

Further reading edit

proto, greek, language, confused, with, greek, substrate, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, code, wikipedia, multilingual, . Not to be confused with Pre Greek substrate 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 The Proto Greek language also known as Proto Hellenic is the Indo European language which was the last common ancestor of all varieties of Greek including Mycenaean Greek the subsequent ancient Greek dialects i e Attic Ionic Aeolic Doric Arcadocypriot and ancient Macedonian either a dialect or a closely related Hellenic language and ultimately Koine Byzantine and Modern Greek along with its variants Proto Greek speakers entered Greece sometime between 2200 and 1900 BC 1 2 4 with the diversification into a southern and a northern group beginning by approximately 1700 BC 5 9 10 11 12 13 Proto GreekProto HellenicReconstruction ofHellenic languages Ancient Greek dialectsRegionSouthern Balkan PeninsulaEra2200 1900 BC appearance in the Greek peninsula 1 2 3 4 1700 BC diversification 5 ReconstructedancestorProto Indo EuropeanProto Greek area of settlement 2200 2100 1900 B C suggested by Katona 2000 Sakellariou 2016 1980 1975 and Phylaktopoulos 1975 View about Proto Greek area in the 3rd millennium BC reconstructed by Vladimir I Georgiev 1973 amp 1981 The boundaries are based on the high concentration of archaic Greek place names in the region in contrast to southern Greece which preserves many pre Greek 6 7 Modern consensus is that pre Proto Greek and other IE languages split from PIE only after 2500 BC with proto Greek forming in the proto Greek area during the Early Helladic III period 2200 2000 BC 8 Contents 1 Origins 2 Diversification 3 Phonology 3 1 Proto Greek changes 3 1 1 Consonants 3 1 1 1 Changes to the aspirates 3 1 1 2 Laryngeal changes 3 1 1 3 Palatalization 3 1 1 3 1 First palatalization 3 1 1 3 2 Restoration 3 1 1 3 3 Second palatalization 3 1 2 Vowels 3 1 2 1 Cowgill s law 3 1 3 Prosody 3 2 Post Proto Greek changes 4 Morphology 4 1 Noun 4 2 Pronoun 4 3 Verb 5 Numerals 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 Further readingOrigins editProto Greek emerged from the diversification of the late Proto Indo European language PIE a process whose last phase gave rise to the later language families and occurred c 2500 BC 14 Pre Proto Greek the Indo European dialect from which Proto Greek originated emerged c 2400 c 2200 BC in an area which bordered pre Proto Indo Iranian to the east and pre Proto Armenian and pre Proto Phrygian to the west at the eastern borders of southeastern Europe 15 16 Speakers of what would become Proto Greek migrated from their homeland which could have been northeast of the Black Sea throughout Europe and reached Greece in a date set around the transition of the Early Bronze Age to the Middle Bronze Age 17 The evolution of Proto Greek could be considered within the context of an early Paleo Balkan sprachbund that makes it difficult to delineate exact boundaries between individual languages 18 The characteristically Greek representation of word initial laryngeals by prothetic vowels is shared for one by the Armenian language which also seems to share some other phonological and morphological peculiarities of Greek this has led some linguists to propose a hypothetically closer relationship between Greek and Armenian although evidence remains scant 19 In modern bibliography models about the settlement and development of proto Greek speakers in the Greek peninsula place it in the region in the period at the earliest around 2200 2000 BC during the Early Helladic III 2 1 Asko Parpola and Christian Carpelan 2005 date the arrival of Proto Greek speakers into the Greek peninsula to 2200 BC 4 131 while Carl Blegen 1928 dates it to c 1900 BC 1 A L Katona 2000 places the beginning of the migration of the Proto Greek speakers from Ukraine towards the south c 2400 c 2300 BC Their proposed route of migration passed through Romania and the eastern Balkans to the Evros river valley from where their main body moved west 20 As such Katona as well as M V Sakellariou agree that the main body of Greek speakers settled in a region that included southwestern Illyria Epirus northwestern Thessaly and western Macedonia 21 Older theories like those of Vladimir I Georgiev placed Proto Greek in northwestern Greece and adjacent areas approximately up to the Aulon river to the north including Parauaea Tymphaia Athamania Dolopia Amphilochia and Acarnania as well as west and north Thessaly Histiaeotis Perrhaibia Tripolis and Pieria in Macedonia during the Late Neolithic 6 22 23 24 However the dating of proto Greek in Bronze Age Greece is compatible with the inherited lexicon from the common Proto Indo European language which excludes any possibility of it being present in Neolithic Greece 25 26 Diversification editIvo Hajnal dates the beginning of the diversification of Proto Greek into the subsequent Greek dialects to a point not significantly earlier than 1700 BC 5 The conventional division of the Greek dialects prior of 1955 differentiated them between a West Greek consisting of Doric and Northwest Greek and an East Greek consisting of Aeolic Arcado Cypriot and Attic Ionic group However after the decipherment of the Linear B script Walter Porzig and Ernst Risch argued for a division between a Northern consisting of Doric Northwest Greek and Aeolic and a Southern consisting of Mycenaean Arcado Cypriot and Attic Ionic group which remains fundamental through today 9 10 11 12 Phonology editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Proto Greek is reconstructed with the following phonemes ConsonantsType Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Labiovelar GlottalNasal m n ɲ a Plosive p b pʰ t d tʰ t a d a k g kʰ kʷ gʷ kʷʰAffricate ts b dz b Fricative s hLiquid l r ľ a r a Semivowel j w VowelsType Front Center BackClose i i u uMid e e e b o ōOpen a aDiphthongs are ai ei oi ui au eu ou ai ei ōi and possibly au eu ōu all are allophonic with the corresponding sequences of vowel and semivowel Exactly one vowel in each word bears a pitch accent equivalent to the Attic Greek acute accent a b c d e Occurs geminated only as the result of palatalization CC lt Cy t also occurs in the combination pt lt py a b c Exact phonetic value uncertain Proto Greek changes edit The primary sound changes separating Proto Greek from the Proto Indo European language include the following Consonants edit Delabialization of labiovelars next to u the boukolos rule This was a phonotactic restriction already in Proto Indo European and continued to be productive in Proto Greek It ceased to be in effect when labiovelars disappeared from the language in post Proto Greek Centumization Merger of palatovelars and velars 27 Merging of sequences of velar w into the labiovelars perhaps with compensatory lengthening of the consonant in one case PIE h eḱwos gt PG hikkʷos gt Mycenaean i qo hikkʷos Attic hippos Aeolic ikkos Debuccalization of s to h in intervocalic and prevocalic positions between two vowels or if word initial and followed by a vowel 27 Loss of prevocalic s was not completed entirely evidenced by sȳ s hȳ s pig from PIE suh dasys dense and dasos dense growth forest som with is another example contaminated with PIE ḱom Latin cum preserved in Greek kai kata koinos to Mycenaean ku su ksun Homeric and Old Attic ksyn later syn Furthermore selas light in the sky as in the aurora and selḗne sela na moon may be more examples of the same if it derived from PIE swel to burn possibly related to hḗlios sun Ionic heelios lt sawelios Strengthening of word initial y to dy gt dz note that Hy gt Vy regularly due to vocalization of laryngeals Filos 27 argues for a probable early loss of final non nasal 28 stop consonants compare Latin quid and Sanskrit cid with Greek ti however Mycenaean texts are inconclusive in offering evidence on this matter as the Linear B script did not explicitly mark final consonants 27 However it appears that these stops were preserved word finally for unstressed words reflected in ek out of 28 Final m gt n Syllabic resonants m n l and r that are not followed by a laryngeal are resolved to vowels or combinations of a vowel and consonantal resonant This resulted in an epenthetic vowel of undetermined quality denoted here as e This vowel then usually developed into a but also o in some cases Thus 29 m n gt e but gt em en before a sonorant e appears as o in Mycenaean after a labial pe mo spermo seed vs usual sperma lt spermn Similarly o often appears in Arcadian after a velar e g deko ten hekoton one hundred vs usual deka hekaton lt deḱm sem ḱm tom l r gt le re but el er before sonorants and analogously e appears as o in Mycenaean Aeolic and Arcadocypriot Example PIE str tos gt usual stratos Aeolic strotos army post PIE ḱr di eh heart gt Attic kardia Homeric kradie Pamphylian korzdia Changes to the aspirates edit Major changes included Devoicing of voiced aspirates bʰ dʰ ɡʰ ɡʷʰ to pʰ tʰ kʰ kʷʰ 27 This change preceded and fed both stages of palatalization Loss of aspiration before s e g heksō I will have lt Post PIE seǵʰ s oh Loss of aspiration before y detailed under palatalization Grassmann s law was a process of dissimilation in words containing multiple aspirates It caused an initial aspirated sound to lose its aspiration when a following aspirated consonant occurred in the same word It was a relatively late change in Proto Greek history and must have occurred independently 28 of the similar dissimilation of aspirates also known as Grassmann s law in Indo Iranian although it may represent a common areal feature The change may have even been post Mycenaean 27 It postdates the Greek specific de voicing of voiced aspirates It postdates the change of s gt h which is then lost in the same environment ekhō I have lt hekh lt PIE seǵʰ oh but future heksō I will have lt heks lt Post PIE seǵʰ s oh It postdates even the loss of aspiration before y that accompanied second stage palatalization see below which postdates both of the previous changes as well as first stage palatalization On the other hand it predates the development of the first aorist passive marker the since the aspirate in that marker has no effect on preceding aspirates Laryngeal changes edit See also Laryngeal theory Greek is unique among Indo European languages in reflecting the three different laryngeals with distinct vowels Most Indo European languages can be traced back to a dialectal variety of late Proto Indo European PIE in which all three laryngeals had merged after colouring adjacent short e vowels but Greek clearly cannot For that reason Greek is extremely important in reconstructing PIE forms Greek shows distinct reflexes of the laryngeals in various positions Most famously between consonants where original vocalic h h h are reflected as e a o respectively the so called triple reflex All other Indo European languages reflect the same vowel from all three laryngeals usually a but i or other vowels in Indo Iranian Proto Indo European Greek Vedic Sanskrit Latin dʰh s sacred religious 8esfatos thesphatos decreed by God ध ष ण य dhiṣṇya devout fanum temple lt fasnom lt dʰh s no sth to standing being made to stand statos statos स थ त sthita status dh ti gift dosis dosis द त diti datiōAn initial laryngeal before a consonant a HC sequence leads to the same triple reflex but most IE languages lost such laryngeals and a few reflect them initially before consonants Greek vocalized them leading to what are misleadingly termed prothetic vowels Greek erebos darkness lt PIE h regʷos vs Gothic riqiz darkness Greek aent wind lt awent lt PIE h weh n t vs English wind Latin ventus wind Breton gwent wind The sequence CRHC C consonant R resonant H laryngeal becomes CReC CRaC CRōC from H h h h respectively Other Indo European languages again have the same reflex for all three laryngeals CuRC in Proto Germanic CiRˀC CuRˀC with acute register in Proto Balto Slavic CiRC CuRC in Proto Indo Iranian CRaC in Proto Italic and Proto Celtic Sometimes CeReC CaRaC CoRoC are found instead Greek thanatos death vs Doric Greek thnatos mortal both apparently reflecting dʰn h tos It is sometimes suggested that the position of the accent was a factor in determining the outcome The sequence CiHC tends to become CyeC CyaC CyōC from H h h h respectively with later palatalization see below Sometimes the outcome CiC is found as in most other Indo European languages or the outcome CiaC in the case of Cih C All of the cases may stem from an early insertion of e next to a laryngeal not adjacent to a vowel in the Indo European dialect ancestral to Greek subsequently coloured to e a o by the particular laryngeal in question prior to the general merger of laryngeals CHC gt CHeC gt CeC CaC CoC HC gt HeC gt eC aC oC CRHC gt CReHC gt CReC CRaC CRōC or CRHC gt CeRHeC gt CeReC CeRaC CeRoC gt CeReC CaRaC CoRoC by assimilation CiHC gt CyeHC gt CyeC CyaC CyōC or Cih C gt Cih eC gt CiHaC gt CiyaC gt CiaC or CiHC remains without vowel insertion gt CiC A laryngeal adjacent to a vowel develops along the same lines as other Indo European languages The sequence CRHV C consonant R resonant H laryngeal V vowel passes through CR HV becoming CaRV The sequence CeHC becomes CeC CaC CōC The sequence CoHC becomes CōC In the sequence CHV including CHR C with a vocalized resonant the laryngeal colours a following short e as expected but it otherwise disappears entirely as in most other Indo European languages but not Indo Iranian whose laryngeal aspirates a previous stop and prevents the operation of Brugmann s law In a VHV sequence a laryngeal between vowels including a vocalic resonant R the laryngeal again colours any adjacent short e but otherwise vanishes early on That change appears to be uniform across the Indo European languages and was probably the first environment in which laryngeals were lost If the first V was i u or a vocalic resonant a consonantal copy was apparently inserted in place of the laryngeal CiHV gt CiyV CuHV gt CuwV CR HV possibly gt CR RV with R always remaining as vocalic until the dissolution of vocalic resonants in the various daughter languages Otherwise a hiatus resulted which was resolved in various ways in the daughter languages typically by converting i u and vocalic resonants when it directly followed a vowel back into a consonant and merging adjacent non high vowels into a single long vowel Palatalization edit Consonants followed by consonantal y were palatalized producing various affricate consonants still represented as a separate sound in Mycenaean and geminated palatal consonants 27 Any aspiration was lost in the process The palatalized consonants later simplified mostly losing their palatal character Palatalization occurred in two separate stages The first stage affected only dental consonants and the second stage affected all consonants First palatalization edit The first palatalization caused dentals y to ultimately become alveolar affricates Before After ty tʰy t s dy d zThe affricate derived from the first palatalization of ty and tʰy merged with the outcome of the inherited clusters ts ds and tʰs all becoming t s 30 Restoration edit After the first palatalization changed ty and tʰy into t s the consonant y was restored after original t or tʰ in morphologically transparent formations The initial outcome of restoration may have been simply ty and tʰy or alternatively restoration may have yielded an affricate followed by a glide t sy in the case of both original t and original tʰ 31 Either way restored t ʰ y would go on to merge via the second palatalization with the reflex of k ʰ y resulting in a distinct outcome from the t s derived from the first palatalization 31 There may also have been restoration of y after original d in the same circumstances but if so it apparently merged with the d z that resulted from the first palatalization before leaving any visible trace 31 However restoration is not evident in Mycenaean Greek where the reflex of original t ʰ y which became a consonant transcribed as s is consistently written differently from the reflex of original k ʰ y which became a consonant transcribed as z via the second palatalization 31 Second palatalization edit The second palatalization affected all consonants It took place following the resolution of syllabic laryngeals and sonorants and prior to Grassmann s law The following table based on American linguist Andrew Sihler 32 shows the outcomes of the second palatalization Before After py pʰy pt ty tʰy or t sy tt ky kʰy kʷy kʷʰy d zy dd gy gʷy ly ľľ my ny nn ry rr sy gt hy yy wy ɥɥ gt yySihler reconstructs the palatalized stops shown in the above table as t d with a degree of assibilation and transcribes them as c ǰ 33 The resulting palatal consonants and clusters of Proto Greek were resolved in varying ways prior to the historical period Most notably n and r were resolved into plain sonorants plus a palatal on glide which eventually turned the preceding vowel into a diphthong Proto Greek Attic Homeric West Ionic Other Ionic Boeotian Arcado Cypriot Other pt pt t s s s ss s tt ss tt tt ss tt ss tt ss d z dd zd ľľ ll il ll nn in but unn gt un rr ir but urr gt ur yy iThe restoration of y after original t or tʰ resulting in tt occurred only in morphologically transparent formations by analogy with similar formations in which y was preceded by other consonants In formations that were morphologically opaque the restoration did not take place and the t s that resulted from the first palatalization of ty and tʰy remained Hence depending on the type of formation the pre Proto Greek sequences ty and tʰy have different outcomes in the later languages In particular medial t ʰ y becomes Attic s in opaque formations but tt in transparent formations The outcome of PG medial ts in Homeric Greek is s after a long vowel and vacillation between s and ss after a short vowel tatesi dat pl rug lt tatet possi n posi n dat pl foot lt pod This was useful for the composer of the Iliad and Odyssey since possi with double s scans as long short while posi with single s scans as short short Thus the writer could use each form in different positions in a line Examples of initial t s PIE tyegʷ avoid gt PG t segʷ gt Greek sebomai worship be respectful Ved tyaj flee PIE dʰyeh notice gt PG t sa gt Dor sa ma Att sema sign Ved dhya thought contemplation Examples of medial t s morphologically opaque forms first palatalization only PreG totyos as much gt PG tot sos gt Att tosos Hom tosos tossos cf Ved tati Lat tot so much many PIE medʰyos middle gt PG met sos gt Att mesos Hom mesos messos Boeot mettos other dial mesos cf Ved madhya Lat medius Examples of medial tt morphologically transparent forms first and second palatalization PIE h erh t yoh I row gt PG erettō gt Attic erettō usual non Attic eressō cf eretes oarsman PIE kret yōs gt PreG kretyōn better gt PG krettōn gt Attic kreittōn 34 usual non Attic kressōn cf kratus strong lt PIE kr tus For words with original dy no distinction is found in any historically attested form of Greek between the outcomes of the first and second palatalizations and so there is no visible evidence of an opposition between d z and a secondary restored cluster d zy gt dd However it is reasonable to think that words with dy originally underwent parallel treatment to words with original ty and tʰy 35 The reflex of dy also merged with the reflex of g ʷ y with one of the two word initial reflexes of PIE y and with original sd as in PIE h esdos osdos gt ozos branch or PIE si sd gt ἵzw take a seat 36 The merger with sd was probably post Mycenaean but occurred before the introduction of the Greek alphabet 37 Vowels edit Osthoff s law Shortening of long vowels before a sonorant in the same syllable E g dyews skyling sky god gt Attic Greek Zeus dzeus Cowgill s law Raising of o to u between a resonant and a labial 27 Cowgill s law edit This section needs expansion with Proto Greek reconstructed forms You can help by adding to it August 2022 In Proto Greek Cowgill s law 38 says that a former o vowel becomes u between a resonant r l m n and a labial consonant including labiovelars in either order Examples Greek ny3 night lt PIE nokʷts cf Latin nox Ved nak lt nakts Gothic nahts gen sg Hittite nekuz nekʷts Greek fyllon leaf lt PIE bʰolyom cf Latin folium Greek mylh mill lt PIE mol eh cf Latin molina Greek ὄny3 nail stem Greek onukh lt early PG onokʷʰ lt PIE h nogʷʰ cf Old English naegl lt PGerm nag laz Note that when a labiovelar adjoins an o affected by Cowgill s law the new u will cause the labiovelar to lose its labial component as in Greek nuks and Greek onuks onukh where the usual Greek change kʷ gt p has not occurred Prosody edit Proto Greek retained the Indo European pitch accent but developed a number of rules governing it 39 The law of limitation also known as the trisyllabicity law confined the freedom of the accents to the final three syllables Alternatively it can be analyzed as restraining the accent to be within the last four morae of the word Wheeler s Law which also developed during Proto Greek causes oxytone words to become paroxytone when ending in a syllable sequence consisting of heavy light light ex poikilos gt poikilos Loss of accent in finite verb forms This probably began in verbs of independent clauses a development also seen in Vedic Sanskrit where they behave as clitics and bear no accent 40 The accentless forms later acquired a default recessive accent placed as far left as the law of limitation allowed Certain imperative forms such as ide go regularly escaped this process and retained their accent Many Proto Greek suffixes bore lexical stress Accentuation rules applied post Proto Greek such as Vendryes s Law and Bartoli s Law modified how and if this would surface 39 Post Proto Greek changes edit Sound changes that postdate Proto Greek but predate the attested dialects including Mycenaean Greek include Loss of s in consonant clusters with compensatory lengthening of the preceding vowel Attic Ionic Doric or of the consonant Aeolic esmi I am gt ḗmi eimi or emmi Creation of secondary s from earlier affricates nty gt nts gt ns This was in turn followed by a change similar to the one described above loss of the n with compensatory lengthening apont ya gt aponsa gt apousa absent feminine In southern dialects including Mycenaean but not Doric ti gt si assibilation The following changes are apparently post Mycenaean because early stages are represented in Linear B Loss of h from original s except initially e g Doric nikaas having conquered lt nikahas lt nikasas Loss of j e g treis three lt treyes Loss of w in many dialects later than loss of h and j Example etos year from wetos Loss of labiovelars which were converted mostly into labials sometimes into dentals or velars next to u as a result of an earlier sound change See below for details It had not yet happened in Mycenaean as is shown by the fact that a separate letter q is used for such sounds Contraction of adjacent vowels resulting from loss of h and j and to a lesser extent from loss of w more in Attic Greek than elsewhere Rise of a distinctive circumflex accent resulting from contraction and certain other changes Loss of n before s incompletely in Cretan Greek with compensatory lengthening of the preceding vowel Raising of a to e ɛː in Attic and Ionic dialects but not Doric In Ionic the change was general but in Attic it did not occur after i e or r Note Attic kore girl lt korwa loss of w after r had not occurred at that point in Attic Vendryes s Law in Attic where a penultimate circumflex accent was retracted onto a preceding light syllable if the final syllable was also light light circumflex light gt acute heavy light For example hetoimos gt Attic hetoimos Analogical prosodic changes that converted a penultimate heavy acute accent to circumflex retraction by one mora if both the final and if present the preceding syllable were light 41 This produced alternations within a paradigm for example Attic oinos wine nominative singular but genitive singular oinou Note that w and j when following a vowel and not preceding a vowel combined early on with the vowel to form a diphthong and so were not lost Loss of h and w after a consonant was often accompanied by compensatory lengthening of a preceding vowel The development of labiovelars varies from dialect to dialect Due to the PIE boukolos rule labiovelars next to u had already been converted to plain velars boukolos herdsman lt gʷou kʷolos cf bous cow lt gʷou vs aipolos goatherd lt ai g kʷolos cf aiks gen aigos goat elakhus small lt h ln gʷʰ us vs elaphros light lt h ln gʷʰ ros In Attic and some other dialects but not for example Aeolic labiovelars before some front vowels became dentals In Attic kʷ and kʷʰ became t and th respectively before e and i while gʷ became d before e but not i Cf theinō I strike kill lt gʷʰen yō vs phonos slaughter lt gʷʰon os delphus womb lt gʷelbʰ Sanskrit garbha vs bios life lt gʷih wos Gothic qius alive tis who lt kʷis Latin quis All remaining labiovelars became labials original kʷ kʷʰ gʷ becoming p ph b respectively That happened to all labiovelars in some dialects like Lesbian in other dialects like Attic it occurred to all labiovelars not converted into dentals Many occurrences of dentals were later converted into labials by analogy with other forms belos missile belemnon spear dart dialectal delemnon by analogy with ballō I throw a missile etc bolḗ a blow with a missile Original PIE labiovelars had still remained as such even before consonants and so became labials also there In many other centum languages such as Latin and most Germanic languages the labiovelars lost their labialisation before consonants Greek pemptos fifth lt penkʷtos compare Old Latin quinctus This makes Greek of particular importance in reconstructing original labiovelars The results of vowel contraction were complex from dialect to dialect Such contractions occur in the inflection of a number of different noun and verb classes and are among the most difficult aspects of Ancient Greek grammar They were particularly important in the large class of contracted verbs denominative verbs formed from nouns and adjectives ending in a vowel In fact the reflex of contracted verbs in Modern Greek the set of verbs derived from Ancient Greek contracted verbs represents one of the two main classes of verbs in that language Morphology editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Noun edit Proto Greek preserved the gender masculine feminine neuter and number singular dual plural distinctions of the nominal system of Proto Indo European 42 However the evidence from Mycenaean Greek is inconclusive with regard to whether all eight cases continued to see complete usage but this is more secure for the five standard cases of Classical Greek nominative genitive dative accusative and vocative and probably also the instrumental in its usual plural suffix pʰi and the variant ṓis for o stem nouns 39 The ablative and locative are uncertain at the time of Mycenaean texts they may have been undergoing a merger with the genitive and dative respectively 39 It is thought that the syncretism between cases proceeded faster for the plural 39 with dative and locative already merged as si the Proto Indo European locative plural having been su 43 39 This merger may have been motivated by analogy to the locative singular i 39 Nevertheless seven case distinctions are securely attested in Mycenaean in some domain with the status of the ablative unclear 44 Significant developments attributed to the Proto Greek period include the replacement of PIE nominative plural as and ōs by ai and oi 39 the genitive and dative dual suffix oi i n Arcadian oiun appears to be exclusive to Greek 39 Genitive singular Proto Indo European asyo is reflected as ao 39 The Proto Greek nominal system is thought to have included cases of gender change according to number heteroclisy and stem alternation ex genitive form hudatos for hudōr water 39 The superlative in tatos becomes productive citation needed The peculiar oblique stem gunaik women attested from the Thebes tablets is probably Proto Greek It appears at least as gunai in Armenian as well citation needed Pronoun edit The pronouns houtos ekeinos and autos are created The use of ho ha to as articles is post Mycenaean Verb edit Proto Greek inherited the augment a prefix e to verbal forms expressing past tense That feature is shared only with Indo Iranian and Phrygian and to some extent Armenian lending some support to a Graeco Aryan or Inner PIE proto dialect However the augment down to the time of Homer remained optional and was probably little more than a free sentence particle meaning previously in the proto language which may easily have been lost by most other branches Greek Phrygian and Indo Iranian also concur in the absence of r endings in the middle voice in Greek apparently already lost in Proto Greek The first person middle verbal desinences mai man replace ai a The third singular pherei is an innovation by analogy replacing the expected Doric phereti Ionic pheresi from PIE bʰereti The future tense is created including a future passive as well as an aorist passive The suffix ka is attached to some perfects and aorists Infinitives in ehen enai and men are created Numerals editProto Greek numerals were derived directly from Indo European 27 one hens masculine hmia feminine gt Myc e me hemei dative Att Ion eἷs ἑnos mia heis henos mia two duwō gt Myc du wo duwoː Hom dyw duō Att Ion dyo duo three treyes gt Myc ti ri trins Att Ion treῖs treis Lesb trhs trḗs Cret trees trees four nominative kʷetwores genitive kʷeturṓn gt Myc qe to ro we kʷetroːwes four eared Att tettares tettares Ion tesseres tesseres Boeot pettares pettares Thess pittares pittares Lesb pisyres pisures Dor tetores tetores five penkʷe gt Att Ion pente pente Lesb Thess pempe pempe six hweks gt Att ἕ3 heks Dor ϝe3 weks seven hepte gt Att ἑpta hepta eight oktṓ gt Att ὀktw oktṓ nine ennewe gt Att ἐnnea ennea Dor ἐnnῆ enne ten deke gt Att deka deka hundred heketon gt Att ἑkaton hekaton thousand kʰehliyoi gt Att xilioi khilioi See also editProto language Greeks Ancient Macedonian language Paleo Balkan languages Pre Greek substrate Proto Indo European languageReferences editCitations edit a b c d Drews Robert 1994 The Coming of the Greeks Indo European Conquests in the Aegean and the Near East Princeton University Press p 14 ISBN 0 691 02951 2 a b c West M L 23 October 1997 The East Face of Helicon West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and Myth Clarendon Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 19 159104 4 Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 28 September 2020 the arrival of the Proto Greek speakers took place at various sites in central and southern Greece at the beginning and end of the Early Helladic III period Filos Panagiotis 2014 Proto Greek and Common Greek In Giannakis G K ed Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III Leiden Boston Brill p 175 Archived from the original on 2022 04 08 Retrieved 2020 08 20 a b c Asko Parpola Christian Carpelan 2005 The cultural counterparts to Proto Indo European Proto Uralic and Proto Aryan matching the dispersal and contact patterns in the linguistic and archaeological record In Edwin Bryant Laurie L Patton eds The Indo Aryan Controversy Evidence and Inference in Indian History Psychology Press pp 107 141 ISBN 978 0 7007 1463 6 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2020 08 21 a b c Hajnal Ivo 2007 Die Vorgeschichte der griechischen Dialekte ein methodischer Ruck und Ausblick In Hajnal Ivo Stefan Barbara eds Die altgriechischen Dialekte Wesen und Werden Akten des Kolloquiums Freie Universitat Berlin 19 22 September 2001 in German Innsbruck Austria Institut fur Sprachen und Literaturen der Universitat Innsbruck p 136 Archived from the original on 2021 10 28 Retrieved 2020 05 06 a b Georgiev 1981 p 156 The Proto Greek region included Epirus approximately up to Aὐlwn in the north including Paravaia Tymphaia Athamania Dolopia Amphilochia and Acarnania west and north Thessaly Hestiaiotis Perrhaibia Tripolis and Pieria i e more or less the territory of contemporary northwestern Greece Crossland R A Birchall Ann 1973 Bronze Age Migrations in the Aegean Archaeological and Linguistic Problems in Greek Prehistory Proceedings of the First International Colloquium on Aegean Prehistory Sheffield Duckworth p 248 ISBN 978 0 7156 0580 6 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2021 02 11 Thus in the region defined just above roughly northern and north western Greece one finds only archaic Greek place names Consequently this is the proto Hellenic area the early homeland of the Greeks where they lived before they invaded central and southern Greece Anthony 2010 p 82 a b Hall Jonathan M 1997 Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity Cambridge University Press p 160 ISBN 978 0 521 78999 8 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2021 02 11 a b Woodard Roger D 2008 The Ancient Languages of Europe Cambridge University Press p 52 ISBN 978 1 139 46932 6 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2021 02 11 a b Horrocks Geoffrey 2010 Greek A History of the Language and its Speakers John Wiley amp Sons pp 19 20 ISBN 978 1 4443 1892 0 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2021 02 11 a b Parker Holt N 2008 The Linguistic Case for the Aiolian Migration Reconsidered Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens American School of Classical Studies at Athens 77 3 443 444 doi 10 2972 hesp 77 3 431 ISSN 0018 098X JSTOR 40205757 S2CID 161497388 A comprehensive overview is in J T Hooker s Mycenaean Greece Hooker 1976 Chapter 2 Before the Mycenaean Age pp 11 33 and passim for a different hypothesis excluding massive migrations and favoring an autochthonous scenario see Colin Renfrew s Problems in the General Correlation of Archaeological and Linguistic Strata in Prehistoric Greece The Model of Autochthonous Origin Renfrew 1973 pp 263 276 especially p 267 in Bronze Age Migrations by R A Crossland and A Birchall eds 1973 Anthony 2010 p 81 Anthony 2010 pp 51 Anthony 2010 pp 369 Demand Nancy 2012 The Mediterranean Context of Early Greek History Wiley p 49 ISBN 978 1 4051 5551 9 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2020 08 20 Renfrew 2003 p 35 Greek The fragmentation of the Balkan Proto Indo European Sprachbund of phase II around 3000 BC led gradually in the succeeding centuries to the much clearer definition of the languages of the constituent sub regions Clackson 1995 Katona 2000 p 84 The time of the departure of the Proto Greeks semel is mid EH II 2400 2300 B C L and A available Their route between Ukraine and Greece can be supposed to have led through Rumania and East Balkans towards the Hebros vallev North Eastern Greece Here they turned to the West A available Katona 2000 pp 84 86 Contacts must have existed too until 1900 B C when Western tribes lived in Epirus Southwest Illyria and Western Macedonia i e in the western neighborhood of the Ionians The main body of the Proto Greeks as seen already in Sakellariou 1980 had settled in southwest Illyria Epirus Western Macedonia and northwestern Thessaly Georgiev 1981 p 192 Late Neolithic Period in northwestern Greece the Proto Greek language had already been formed this is the original home of the Greeks Coleman 2000 pp 101 153 Feuer Bryan 2 March 2004 Mycenaean Civilization An Annotated Bibliography through 2002 rev ed McFarland p 67 ISBN 978 0 7864 1748 3 Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 28 September 2020 Supports an interpretation of Marija Gimbutas Kurgan theory involving the migration of a proto Greek population which arrived in Greece during the Early Helladic period Mallory J P 2003 The Homeland of the Indo Europeans In Blench Roger Spriggs Matthew eds Archaeology and Language I Theoretical and Methodological Orientations Routledge p 101 ISBN 1 134 82877 2 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2020 08 20 Anthony 2010 p 81 a b c d e f g h i Filos Panagiotis Proto Greek and Common Greek In G K Giannakis et al eds Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III Leiden Boston 2014 Brill 175 189 section 4c a b c Benjamin W Fortson IV 2004 Indo European Language and Culture Blackwell Publishing Ltd p 227 Filos p 178 sfn error no target CITEREFFilos help Sihler 1995 p 190 a b c d Sihler 1995 p 191 Sihler 1995 p 189 196 Sihler 1995 p 192 Lengthened ei eː due to Attic analogical lengthening in comparatives Sihler 1995 pp 191 192 Sihler 1995 pp 194 Teodorsson Sven Tage 1979 On the Pronunciation of Ancient Greek Zeta Lingua 47 4 323 332 doi 10 1016 0024 3841 79 90078 0 Sihler 1995 pp 42 43 a b c d e f g h i j k Filos Panagiotis 2014 Proto Greek and Common Greek In Giannakis G K ed Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III Leiden Boston Brill p 180 Archived from the original on 2022 04 08 Retrieved 2020 08 20 Sihler 1995 Sihler 1995 Filos Panagiotis 2014 Proto Greek and Common Greek In Giannakis G K ed Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III Leiden Boston Brill pp 180 181 Archived from the original on 2022 04 08 Retrieved 2020 08 20 Benjamin W Fortson IV 2004 Indo European Language and Culture Blackwell Publishing Ltd p 226 Ramon Jose Luis Garcia 2017 The morphology of Greek In Klein Joseph and Fritz 2017 Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Page 654 Sources edit Anthony David 2010 The Horse the Wheel and Language How Bronze Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 3110 4 Buck Carl Darling 1933 Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin Chicago University of Chicago Press Clackson James 1995 The Linguistic Relationship Between Armenian and Greek Oxford Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 19197 1 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2016 05 21 Coleman John E 2000 An Archaeological Scenario for the Coming of the Greeks ca 3200 B C The Journal of Indo European Studies 28 1 2 101 153 Archived from the original on 2022 03 08 Retrieved 2018 06 01 Fortson Benjamin W IV 2004 Indo European Language and Culture Malden MA Blackwell Publishing ISBN 1 4051 0316 7 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2016 02 23 Georgiev Vladimir Ivanov 1981 Introduction to the History of the Indo European Languages Sofia Bulgarian Academy of Sciences ISBN 978 953 51 7261 1 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2016 02 23 Hooker J T 1976 Mycenaean Greece London Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 7100 8379 1 Katona A L 2000 Proto Greeks and the Kurgan Theory PDF The Journal of Indo European Studies Archived PDF from the original on 2021 01 26 Retrieved 2021 01 22 Renfrew Colin 1973 Problems in the General Correlation of Archaeological and Linguistic Strata in Prehistoric Greece The Model of Autochthonous Origin In Crossland R A Birchall Ann eds Bronze Age Migrations in the Aegean Archaeological and Linguistic Problems in Greek Prehistory Proceedings of the first International Colloquium on Aegean Prehistory Sheffield London Gerald Duckworth and Company Limited pp 263 276 ISBN 0 7156 0580 1 Renfrew Colin 2003 Time Depth Convergence Theory and Innovation in Proto Indo European Old Europe as a PIE Linguistic Area In Bammesberger Alfred Vennemann Theo eds Languages in Prehistoric Europe Heidelberg Universitatsverlag Winter GmBH pp 17 48 ISBN 978 3 82 531449 1 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2016 04 15 Schwyzer Eduard 1939 Griechische Grammatik auf der Grundlage von Karl Brugmanns Griechischer Grammatik in German Munich C H Beck ISBN 978 3 406 03397 1 Sihler Andrew L 1995 New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 508345 8 Archived from the original on 2023 03 26 Retrieved 2016 02 23 Filos Panagiotis 2014 Proto Greek and Common Greek In Giannakis G K ed Brill Encyclopedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics III Leiden Boston Brill p 175 Archived from the original on 2022 04 08 Retrieved 2020 08 20 Further reading editBeekes Robert Stephen Paul 1995 Comparative Indo European Linguistics Amsterdam John Benjamins ISBN 90 272 2150 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proto Greek language amp oldid 1185930076, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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