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Varieties of Modern Greek

The linguistic varieties of Modern Greek can be classified along two principal dimensions. First, there is a long tradition of sociolectal variation between the natural, popular spoken language on the one hand and archaizing, learned written forms on the other. Second, there is regional variation between dialects. The competition between the popular and the learned registers (see Diglossia) culminated in the struggle between Dimotiki and Katharevousa during the 19th and 20th centuries. As for regional dialects, variation within the bulk of dialects of present-day Greece is not particularly strong, except for a number of outlying, highly divergent dialects spoken by isolated communities.

Diglossia

Roots and history: Demotic and Katharevousa

Ever since the times of Koiné Greek in Hellenistic and Roman antiquity, there was a competition between the naturally evolving spoken forms of Greek on the one hand, and the use of artificially archaic, learned registers on the other. The learned registers employed grammatical and lexical forms in imitation of classical Attic Greek (Atticism).[1] This situation is known in modern linguistics as diglossia.[2]

During the Middle Ages, Greek writing varied along a continuum between extreme forms of the high register very close to Attic, and moderate forms much closer to the spoken Demotic.[3] According to Manolis Triantafyllides, the modern Greek language of the beginning of the 19th century, as used in the demotic poetry of the time, has very few grammatical differences from the vernacular language of the 15th century.[4] During the early Modern Era, a middle-ground variety of moderately archaic written standard Greek emerged in the usage of educated Greeks (such as the Phanariots) and the Greek church; its syntax was essentially Modern Greek.[5] After the Greek War of Independence and the formation of the modern Greek state (1830), a political effort was made to "purify" this form of Greek by bringing it back to resemble classical Attic Greek more closely. The result was Katharevousa (καθαρεύουσα, lit. 'the purifying one'), still a compromise form with basically Modern Greek syntax, but re-lexified with a much larger amount of Ancient Greek words and morphology.[6] Katharevousa was used as an official language in administration, education, the church, journalism, and (until the late 19th century) in literature.

At the same time, spoken Demotic, while not recognised as an official language, nevertheless developed a supra-regional, de facto standard variety. From the late 19th century onwards, written Demotic rather than Katharevousa became the primary medium of literature. During much of the 20th century, there were heated political conflicts over the use of either of the two varieties, especially over the issue of their use in education. Schools were forced to switch from one form to the other and back several times during the 20th century. The conflict was resolved only after the overthrow of the Greek military junta of 1967-1974, whose strong ideological pro-Katharevousa stance had ultimately contributed to bringing that language form into disrepute.[7] In 1976, shortly after the restoration of democracy, Demotic was finally adopted for use everywhere in education and became the language of the state for all official purposes.[8] By that time, however, the form of Demotic used in practice was no longer the pure popular dialect, but had begun to assimilate elements from the Katharevousa tradition again. In 1982 diacritics were replaced by the monotonic orthography.[9]

Standard Modern Greek

Modern linguistics has come to call the resulting variety "Standard Modern Greek" to distinguish it from the pure original Demotic of earlier literature and traditional vernacular speech. Greek authors sometimes use the term "Modern Greek Koiné" (Greek: Νεοελληνική Κοινή, romanized: Neoellinikí Koiní, lit.'Common Modern Greek'), reviving the term koiné that otherwise refers to the "common" form of post-classical Ancient Greek; according to these scholars, Modern Greek Koiné is the "supra-dialect product of the composition of both the Demotic and Katharevousa."[10] Indeed, Standard Modern Greek has incorporated a large amount of vocabulary from the learned tradition, especially through the registers of academic discourse, politics, technology and religion; together with these, it has incorporated a number of morphological features associated with their inflectional paradigms, as well as some phonological features not originally found in pure Demotic.

History of modern Greek dialects

The first systematic scholarly treatment of the modern Greek dialects took place after the middle of the 19th century, mainly thanks to the work of the prominent Greek linguist Georgios Hadjidakis.[11] The absence of descriptive accounts of the speech of individual regions made the efforts of the researchers of the 19th century more difficult.[12] Therefore, the dialects' forms are known to us only during their last phase (from the middle of the 19th century, and until the panhellenic dominance of the Standard Modern Greek).

Initial dialect differentiation

Modern linguistics is not in accord with the tendency of the 19th century scholars to regard modern Greek dialects as the direct descendants of the dialects of ancient Greek.[13] According to the latest findings of scholarship, modern Greek dialects are products of the dialect differentiation of Koiné Greek, and, with the exception of Tsakonian and possibly Italiot Greek, they have no correlation with the ancient dialects.[14]

It is difficult to monitor the evolution of Koiné Greek and its splitting into the modern Greek dialects; certain researchers make the hypothesis that the various local varieties were formed between the 10th and the 12th century (as part of an evolution starting a few centuries before), but it is difficult to draw some safer conclusions because of the absence of texts written in the vernacular language, when this initial dialect differentiation occurred. Very few paradigms of these local varieties are found in certain texts, which however used mainly learned registers. The first texts written in modern Greek dialects appear during the Early Renaissance in the islands of Cyprus and Crete.[15]

Historical literary dialects

Before the establishment of a common written standard of Demotic Greek, there were various approaches to using regional variants of Demotic as a written language. Dialect is recorded in areas outside Byzantine control, first in legal and administrative documents, and then in poetry. The earliest evidence for literary dialects comes from areas under Latin control, notably from Cyprus, Crete, and the Aegean islands. From Cyprus under the Lusignan dynasty (the 14th to 16th centuries), legal documents, prose chronicles, and a group of anonymous love poems have survived. Dialect archives also survive from 15th century Naxos.[16]

It is above all from the island of Crete, during the period of Venetian rule from 1204 until its capture by the Ottomans in 1669, that dialect can be illustrated more fully. Documents showing dialectal features exist from the end of the 12th century, rapidly increasing in number from the 13th century onward.[17] During the Cretan Renaissance in the 16th and early 17th centuries there existed a flourishing vernacular literature in the Cretan dialect, based on Italian literary influences. Its best-known specimen today is the verse romance Erotokritos, by Vitsentzos Kornaros (1553–1614).

Later, during the 18th and early 19th centuries, the Ionian Islands, then also under Italian rule, became a centre of literary production in Demotic Greek. The best-known writer from that period was the poet Dionysios Solomos (1789–1857), who wrote the Greek national anthem (Hymn to Liberty) and other works celebrating the Greek Revolution of 1821–1830. His language became influential on the further course of standardisation that led to the emergence of the modern standard form of Demotic, based on the south-western dialects.

Modern varieties

Spoken modern vernacular Greek can be divided into various geographical varieties. There are a small number of highly divergent, outlying varieties spoken by relatively isolated communities, and a broader range of mainstream dialects less divergent from each other and from Standard Modern Greek, which cover most of the linguistic area of present-day Greece and Cyprus. Native Greek scholarship traditionally distinguishes between "dialects" proper (διάλεκτος), i.e. strongly marked, distinctive varieties, and mere "idioms" (ιδίωμα), less markedly distinguished sub-varieties of a language. In this sense, the term "dialect" is often reserved to only the main outlying forms listed in the next section (Tsakonian, Pontic, Cappadocian and Italiot), whereas the bulk of the mainstream spoken varieties of present-day Greece are classified as "idioms".[18] However, most English-speaking linguists tend to refer to them as "dialects", emphasising degrees of variation only when necessary. The geographical varieties of Greek are divided into three main groups, Northern, Semi-Northern and Southern, based on whether they make synizesis and vowel elision:[19]

Examples of Northern dialects are Rumelian, Epirote (except Thesprotia prefecture), Thessalian, Macedonian,[20] Thracian.
The Southern category is divided into groups that include variety groups from:
  1. Megara, Aegina, Athens, Kymi (Old Athenian) and Mani Peninsula (Maniot)
  2. Peloponnese (except Mani), Cyclades, Crete and Ionian Islands
  3. Dodecanese and Cyprus.
  4. Part of Southern Albania (known as Northern Epirus among Greeks).[21]
  5. Asia Minor (Modern Turkey)

Outlying varieties

Tsakonian

 
(Tsakonian/Greek) "Our language is Tsakonian. Ask and they'll tell you". Greek sign in the town of Leonidio.

Tsakonian is a highly divergent variety, sometimes classified as a separate language because of not being intelligible to speakers of standard Greek.[22] It is spoken in a small mountainous area slightly inland from the east coast of the Peloponnese peninsula. It is unique among all other modern varieties in that it is thought to derive not from the ancient AtticIonian Koiné, but from Doric or from a mixed form of a late, ancient Laconian variety of the Koiné influenced by Doric.[23] It used to be spoken earlier in a wider area of the Peloponnese, including Laconia, the historical home of the Doric Spartans.

Pontic Greek

 
Anatolian Greek until 1923. Demotic in yellow. Pontic in orange. Cappadocian, Pharasiot and Silliot Greek are in green. Green dots indicate non-Pontic-speaking villages in 1910.[24]

Pontic Greek varieties are those originally spoken along the eastern Black Sea coast of Asia Minor, the historical region of Pontus in Turkey. From there, speakers of Pontic migrated to other areas along the Black Sea coast, in Ukraine (see Mariupol), Russia and Georgia. Through the forced population exchange after the Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922) and the Treaty of Lausanne of 1923, the Pontic speakers of Turkey were expelled and moved to Greece. Of the Pontic speakers in the ex-Soviet Union, many have immigrated to Greece more recently. The number of Pontic Greeks currently maintaining the dialect is unclear.[25] A small group of Muslim Pontic speakers remain in Turkey, although their varieties show heavy structural convergence towards Turkish.[26]

Cappadocian Greek

Other varieties of Anatolian Greek that were influenced by the Turkish language, besides Pontic, are now almost extinct, but were widely spoken until 1923 in central Turkey, and especially in Cappadocia.[27] In 1923, all Orthodox Christian inhabitants of Asia Minor were forced to emigrate to Greece after the Greek genocide (1919–1921) during the Population exchange between Greece and Turkey.[28] In 2005, professors Mark Janse and Dimitris Papazachariou discovered that there are still native speakers of the Mistiot dialect of Cappadocian in Central and Northern Greece.[29] Cappadocian Greek diverged from the other Byzantine Greek varieties earlier, beginning with the Turkish conquests of central Anatolia in the 11th and 12th centuries, and so developed several radical features, such as the loss of the gender for nouns.[24] Having been isolated from the crusader conquests (Fourth Crusade) and the later Venetian influence of the Greek coast, it retained the Ancient Greek terms for many words that were replaced with Romance ones in Demotic Greek.[24] The poet Rumi, whose name means "Roman", referring to his residence amongst the "Roman" Greek speakers of Cappadocia, wrote a few poems in Cappadocian Greek, leaving one of the earliest attestations of the dialect.[30][31][32][33]

Pharasiot Greek

The Greek dialect spoken in Pharasa (Faraşa, now Çamlıca village in Yahyalı, Kayseri) and other nearby villages (Afshar-Köy, Çukuri), to the east of Cappadocia, is not particularly close to Cappadocian. It may be closer to Pontic, or equally distant from both. The Pharasiot priest Theodoridis published some folk texts. In 2018, Metin Bağrıaçık published a thesis on Pharasiot Greek, based on speakers remaining in Greece.[34]

Silliot Greek

The Greek dialect of Sille (near Iconium/Konya) was the most divergent of the varieties of Asia Minor Greek.[citation needed]

Italiot Greek

 
Location map of the Griko-speaking areas in Salento and Calabria

Griko or Italiot Greek refers to the Greek varieties spoken in some areas of southern Italy, a historical remnant of the ancient colonisation of Magna Graecia. There are two small Griko-speaking communities known as the Griko people who live in the Italian regions of Calabria, the southern tip of the Italian peninsula, and in Apulia, its south-easternmost corner. These varieties too are believed to have developed on the basis of an originally Doric ancient dialect, and have preserved some elements of it, though to a lesser extent than Tsakonian.[35] They subsequently adopted influences from ancient Koiné, but became isolated from the rest of the Greek-speaking world after the decline of Byzantine rule in Italy during the Middle Ages. Among their linguistic peculiarities, besides influences from Italian, is the preservation of the infinitive, which was lost in the modern Greek of the Balkans.

Mariupolitan

Rumeíka (Ρωμαίικα) or Mariupolitan Greek is a dialect spoken in about 17 villages around the northern coast of the Sea of Azov in southern Ukraine. Mariupolitan Greek is closely related to Pontic Greek and evolved from the dialect of Greek spoken in the Crimea, which was a part of the Pontic Empire of Trebizond until that state fell to the Ottomans in 1461.[36] Thereafter the Crimean region remained independent and continued to exist as the Greek Principality of Theodoro. The Greek speaking residents of the Crimea were invited by Catherine the Great to resettle in, and found, the new city of Mariupol after the Russo-Turkish War (1768–74) to escape the then Muslim dominated Crimea.[37] Its main features present certain similarities with both the Pontic (e.g. the lack of synizesis of -ía, éa), and the northern varieties of the core dialects (e.g. the northern vocalism).[38]

Istanbul Greek

Istanbul Greek is a dialect of Greek spoken in Istanbul, as well as by the Istanbul Greek emigre community in Athens. It is characterized by a high frequency of loanwords and grammatical structures imported from other languages, the main influences being Turkish, French, Italian and Armenian,[39] while also preserving some archaic characteristics lost in other dialects. Speakers are noted for their production of dark L and postalveolar affricates.

Other outlying varieties

In Asia Minor, Greek varieties existed not only in the broader area of Cappadocia, but also in the western coast. The most characteristic is the dialect of Smyrna which had a number of distinguishing features, such as certain differences in the accusative and genitive cases of the definite article; the Greek speakers of the area had also incorporated into their dialect many French words. Constantinopolitan Greek, on the other side, has very few dialectal features, and it is very close to what scholars call "Modern Greek Koiné."[40]

Another Greek outlying dialect was spoken, until the mid-20th century, in Cargèse on Corsica, by descendants of 17th-century settlers from the Mani peninsula.[41] The dialect, which is now regarded as extinct, had preserved the main characteristics of the Mani dialect, and had been also influenced by both the Corsican and the French language (official language of the island after its union with France).[42]

Core dialects

 
Map showing the distribution of major Modern Greek dialect areas.[43] The dialect of Northern Epirus (not listed here) belongs to the southern varieties.
 
Map showing important isoglosses between the traditional Modern Greek dialects (c.1900).[44]
  • Purple: Area of "northern vocalism" (/skiˈli/ > [skli])
  • Yellow: Area of palatalisation of /k/ > (/kiriaˈki/ > [tʃirjaˈtʃi]
  • Green: Area of palatalisation of /k/ > [ts] (/kiriaˈki/ > [tsirjaˈtsi])
  • Brown: Geminated initial consonants (/ne/ > [nne])
  • Red: Retention of word-final /n/
  • Dark brown: Historical /y/ > /u/

Unlike the above, the varieties described below form a contiguous Greek-speaking area, which covers most of the territory of Greece. They represent the vast majority of Greek speakers today. As they are less divergent from each other and from the standard, they are typically classified as mere "idioms" rather than "dialects" by Greek authors, in the native Greek terminology.

The most prominent contrasts between the present-day dialects are found between northern and southern varieties. Northern varieties cover most of continental Greece down to the Gulf of Corinth, while the southern varieties are spoken in the Peloponnese peninsula and the larger part of the Aegean and Ionian islands, including the large southern islands of Crete and Cyprus. The most salient defining marker of the northern varieties is their treatment of unstressed vowels (so-called northern vocalism), while many southern varieties are characterised, among other things, by their palatalisation of velar consonants. Between these areas, in a contiguous area around the capital Athens (i.e. the regions of Attica and neighbouring parts of Boeotia, Euboia, the Peloponnese and nearby islands), there is a "dialectal void" where no distinctly marked traditional Greek dialects are found.[45] This is due to the fact that these areas were once predominantly inhabited by speakers of Arvanitika Albanian. The Greek spoken in this area today is the product of convergence between varieties of migrants who moved to the capital and its surroundings from various other parts of the country, and it is close to the standard. On the whole, Standard Modern Greek is based predominantly on the southern dialects, especially those of the Peloponnese.

At the fringes of this former Arvanitika-speaking area, there were once some enclaves of highly distinct traditional Greek dialects, believed to have been remnants of a formerly contiguous Greek dialect area from the time before the Arvanitic settlement. These include the old local dialect of Athens itself ("Old Athenian"), that of Megara (to the west of Attica), of Kymi in Euboia and of the island of Aegina. These dialects are now extinct.[46]

The following linguistic markers have been used to distinguish and classify the dialects of Greece. Many of these features are today characteristic only of the traditional rural vernaculars and may be socially stigmatised. Younger, urban speakers throughout the country tend to converge towards accents closer to the standard language, with Cyprus being an exception to this.

Phonological features

  • Northern vocalism (high vowel loss). In the north, unstressed high vowels (/i/ and /u/) are typically deleted (e.g. [skon] vs. standard [ˈskoni]) 'dust'). Unstressed mid vowels (/e/ and /o/) are raised to [i] and [u] instead (e.g. [piˈði] vs. standard [peˈði] 'child'). Subtypes of this phenomenon can be distinguished as follows: in "Extreme Northern" dialects these two processes apply throughout. In mid "Northern" dialects the deletion of /i/ and /u/ applies only to word-final vowels. "Semi-Northern" dialects only have the deletion of word-final /i/ and /u/, but not the raising of /e/ and /o/.[47] The latter include Mykonos, Skiros, Lefkada and the urban dialect of the Greeks of Constantinople.
  • Palatalisation. Standard Greek has an allophonic alternation between velar consonants ([k], [ɡ], [x], [ɣ]) and palatalised counterparts (([c], [ɟ], [ç], [ʝ]) before front vowels (/i/, /e/). In southern dialects, the palatalisation goes further towards affricates (e.g. [tʃe] vs. standard [ce] 'and'). Subtypes can be distinguished that have either palato-alveolar ([tʃ], [dʒ], [ʃ], [ʒ]) or alveolo-palatal sounds ([tɕ], [dʑ], [ɕ], [ʑ]). The former are reported for Cyprus, the latter for Crete, among others.[48]
  • Tsitakism. In a core area in which the palatalisation process has gone even further, covering mainly the Cycladic Islands, palatalised /k/ is further fronted to alveolar [t͡s] and thus merges with the original phoneme /t͡s/.[49] This phenomenon is known in Greek as tsitakism (τσιτακισμός). It was also shared by Old Athenian.
  • Ypsilon. A highly archaic feature shared by Tsakonian, the Maniot dialect, and the Old Athenian enclave dialects, is the divergent treatment of historical /y/ (<υ>). While this sound merged to /i/ everywhere else, these dialects have /u/ instead (e.g. [ˈksulo] vs. standard [ˈksilo] 'wood').[48]
  • Geminate consonants. Most Modern Greek varieties have lost the distinctively long (geminate) consonants found in Ancient Greek. However, the dialects of the south-eastern islands, including Cyprus, have preserved them, and even extended them to new environments such as word-initial positions. Thus, the word <ναι> 'yes' is pronounced with a distinctively long initial [nː] in Cypriot, and there are minimal pairs such as <φύλλο> [ˈfilːo] 'leaf' vs. <φύλο> [ˈfilo] 'gender', which are pronounced exactly the same in other dialects but distinguished by consonant length in Cypriot.[50]
  • Dark /l/. A distinctive marker of modern northern vernaculars, especially of Macedonia, is the use of a "dark" (velarised) [ɫ] sound.
  • Medial fricative deletion. Some dialects of the Aegean Islands, especially in the Dodecanese, have a tendency of deleting intervocalic voiced fricatives /v/, /ð/, /ɣ/ (e.g. [meˈalo] vs. standard [meˈɣalo] 'big').[51]
  • Nasals and voiced plosives. Dialects differ in their phonetic treatment of the result of the assimilation of voiceless plosives with preceding nasals. All dialects have a voicing of the plosive in this position, but while some dialects also have an audible segment of prenasalisation, others do not; thus <πομπός> (pompós) 'transmitter' may be realised as either [poˈᵐbos] or [poˈbos].[52] Furthermore, prenasalisation tends to be preserved in more formal registers regardless of geography. In informal speech, it tends to be more common in northern varieties.
  • Lack of synizesis of -ía, éa > /ja/. Standard Greek and most dialects have a pattern whereby Ancient Greek /e/ or /i/ immediately before an accented (later stressed) vowel have turned into a non-syllabic glide /j/,[citation needed] for instance in <παιδιά> [peˈðʝa] 'children', from Ancient Greek <παιδία> [pa͜idía]. In some dialects this process has not taken place or has done so only partially. These dialects display either full preservation of [e, i], or a schwa sound [ə], leading to forms such as <φωλέα> [foˈle.a] 'nest' and <παιδία> [peˈði.a] 'children'. The phenomenon is common in Griko and Pontic. It is also reported in Mani and Kythira.[53] On the other hand, in some dialects that have /j/, the glide gets further reduced and deleted after a preceding sibilant (/s, z/), leading to forms like <νησά> [niˈsa] 'islands' instead of standard <νησιά> [niˈsça] (de-palatalisation of sibilants[54]).

Grammatical features

  • Final /n/. Most Modern Greek varieties have lost word-final -n, once a part of many inflectional suffixes of Ancient Greek, in all but very few grammatical words. The south-eastern islands have preserved it in many words (e.g. [ˈipen] vs. standard [ˈipe] he said; [tiˈrin] vs. standard [tiˈri] 'cheese').[50]
  • 'inda? versus ti?' In Standard Greek, the interrogative pronoun what? is ti. In most of the Aegean Islands (except at its geographical fringe: Rhodes in the south-east, Lemnos, Thasos and the Sporades in the north; and Andros in the west) as well as on Cyprus, it is inda.[55]
  • Indirect objects. All Modern Greek dialects have lost the dative case. In some dialects, this has resulted in a merger between the dative and the genitive, whereas in others there has been a merger between the dative and the accusative. In the standard and in the southern dialects, the personal pronoun forms used to express indirect objects are those of the genitive case, as in example 1 below. In northern dialects, like Macedonian;[20] mainly in Thessaloniki, Constantinople, Rhodes, and in Mesa Mani, the accusative forms are used instead,[20][28] as in example 2. In plural, only the accusative forms are used both in southern and northern dialects[citation needed].
     (1) Standard Greek: Σου
you.GEN
δίνω
I-give
το βιβλίο
the book
(2) Northern Greek: Σε
you.ACC
δίνω
I-give
το βιβλίο
the book
'I give you the book'

References

  1. ^ Horrocks, Geoffrey (1997): Greek: a history of the language and its speakers. London: Longman. Ch. 5.5
  2. ^ Ferguson, Charles A. (1959): "Diglossia." Word 15: 325–340.
  3. ^ Horrocks (1997), ch.10; Trapp, Erich (1993). "Learned and Vernacular Literature in Byzantium: Dichotomy or Symbiosis?". Dumbarton Oaks Papers. 47: 115–129. doi:10.2307/1291674. JSTOR 1291674. Although scholars have not been inclined to transpose to Byzantine literature the former conflict between καθαρεύουσα and δημοτική in modern Greek, the outward appearance of a clear dichotomy in learned and vernacular literature lasts, especially in the manuals, bibliography and lexica.
  4. ^ Triantafyllides, Manolis; Lakonas, Kleandros; Stavrou, Thrasyvoulos; Tzartzanos, Achilleas; Favis, Vassilios; Andriotis, Nikolaos (1988) [Reprint edition of the 1941 first edition]. Modern Greek Grammar (in Greek). Thessaloniki: M. Triandaphyllidis Foundation. pp. 5–6. ISBN 960-231-027-8.
  5. ^ Horrocks, ch.15.
  6. ^ Horrocks, ch.17.
  7. ^ Horrocks, ch.17.6.
  8. ^ Law 309/1976 "About the Organization and Administration of the General Education"
  9. ^ Presidential Decree 207/1982
  10. ^ Babiniotis (2007), 29
  11. ^ Browning, Robert (1983). "The Dialects of Modern Greek". Medieval and Modern Greek. Cambridge University Press. p. 119. ISBN 0-521-29978-0.
  12. ^ Kontosopoulos, Nikolaos G. (2007). "Dialects and Idioms of the Modern Greek". Papyros-Larousse-Britannica (in Greek). Vol. 53 (Greece: Language-Antiquity). Athens: Papyros. pp. 149–150. ISBN 978-960-6715-39-6.
  13. ^ Browning (1983), 119: "Scholars of the generation of F.W. Mullach sought to find Dorisms and Aeolisms in the medieval and Modern Greek dialects, or even went further back, seeking the origin of certain of their characteristics in primitive "Indo-European".
  14. ^ Browning (1983), 119
    * Kontosopoulos (2007), 149
  15. ^ Kontosopoulos (2007), 149
  16. ^ Alexiou, Margaret (2002). "The Emergence of Dialect Literature: Cyprus and Crete". After Antiquity: Greek Language, Myth, and Metaphor. Cornell University Press. pp. 28–29. ISBN 0-8014-3301-0. Cretan dialect, Cyprus, literary.
  17. ^ Alexiou (2002), 29
  18. ^ For the distinction between "Greek dialects" and "Greek idioms", see Kontosopoulos, Nikolaos (1999): "Dialektoi kai idiomata". In: Manos Kopidaks et al. (eds.), Istoria tis ellinikis glossas.. Athens: Elliniko Logotechniko kai Istoriko Archeio. 188–205; Kontosopoulos (2008) 2–3; Trudgill (2003) 49 [Modern Greek dialects. A preliminary Classification, in: Journal of Greek Linguistics 4 (2003), p. 54-64] : "Dialekti are those varieties that are linguistically very different from Standard Greek [...] Idiomata are all the other varieties."
  19. ^ "Tromaktiko: Οι Νεοελληνικές διάλεκτοι".
  20. ^ a b c Studies in Greek Syntax (1999), Pg 98–99 Artemis Alexiadou; Geoffrey C. Horrocks; Melita Stavrou (1999). Preview in Google Books. ISBN 978-0-7923-5290-7.
  21. ^ Nick Nicholas. Appendix A. History & Diatopy of Greek. 2004-12-06 at the Wayback Machine The story of pu: The grammaticalisation in space and time of a Modern Greek complementiser. December 1998. University of Melbourne, p. 20.
  22. ^ http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=tsd
    C.F. & F.M. Voegelin, Classification and Index of the World's Languages (1977, Elsevier), pg. 148–149.
    Brian Joseph, "Language Contact and the Development of Negation in Greek — and How Balkan Slavic Helps to Illuminate the Situation" online, accessed 7 April 2009
  23. ^ Horrocks, ch.4.4.3; C. Brixhe (2007): A modern approach to the ancient dialects, in: A. F. Christides (ed.), A history of Ancient Greek, Cambridge University Press, p.499.
  24. ^ a b c Dawkins, R.M. 1916. Modern Greek in Asia Minor. A study of dialect of Silly, Cappadocia and Pharasa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  25. ^ 500,000 (living in 300 villages) Pontic Greek speakers according to Myrtsioti, Time Resistant Dialects 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine; 300,000 according to Trudgill (2003), 48
  26. ^ Mackridge, Peter (1987): "Greek-Speaking Moslems of North-East Turkey: Prolegomena to Study of the Ophitic Sub-Dialect of Pontic." Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 11: 115–137. Quoted in Horrocks, ch.14.2
  27. ^ Dawkins, R.M. (1916): Modern Greek in Asia Minor. A study of dialect of Silly, Cappadocia and Pharasa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Janse, The Cappadocian Language[permanent dead link].
  28. ^ a b Symeonides, Ch.P. (2007). "Greek language". Papyros-Larousse-Britannica. Editions Papyros. ISBN 978-960-6715-39-6.
  29. ^ Cappadocian 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, Roosevelt Academy; Janse, The Cappadocian Language[permanent dead link]
  30. ^ Δέδες, Δ. 1993. Ποιήματα του Μαυλανά Ρουμή. Τα Ιστορικά 10.18–19: 3–22.
  31. ^ Meyer, G. 1895. Die griechischen Verse in Rabâbnâma. Byzantinische Zeitschrift 4: 401–411.
  32. ^ "Untitled Document". Archived from the original on 2012-08-05. Retrieved 2014-10-24.
  33. ^ http://www.khamush.com/greek/gr.htm
  34. ^ Metin Bağrıaçık, Pharasiot Greek: Word order and clause structure, Ghent University, 2018.
  35. ^ Horrocks, ch.14.2.3.
  36. ^ Dawkins, Richard M. "THE PONTIC DIALECT OF MODERN GREEK IN ASIA MINOR AND RUSSIA". Transactions of the Philological Society 36.1 (1937): 15–52.
  37. ^ "Greeks of the Steppe". The Washington Post. 10 November 2012. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  38. ^ Kontosopoulos (2008), 109
  39. ^ Matthew John Hadodo (January 2018). "Pockets of Change: Salience and Sound Change in Istanbul Greek". Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference of Modern Greek Dialects and Linguistic Theory.
  40. ^ Kontosopoulos (2008), 114–116; Trudgill (2003), 60
  41. ^ Blanken, Gerard (1951), Les Grecs de Cargèse (Corse): Recherches sur leur langue et sur leur histoire Leiden: A. W. Sijthoff. (see review in Language 30 (1954): 278–781. [1]); Nicholas, The deletion of final /s/ in Mani and Corsica 2012-02-13 at the Wayback Machine
  42. ^ See Kontosopoulos (2008), 82–83, who regards Cargese as an "idiom".
  43. ^ Based on: Brian Newton: The Generative Interpretation of Dialect. A Study of Modern Greek Phonology, Cambridge 1972, ISBN 0-521-08497-0
  44. ^ Map based on: Peter Trudgill (2003): Modern Greek dialects. A preliminary Classification. Journal of Greek Linguistics 4: 54–64 pdf 2007-09-26 at the Wayback Machine. Shown in grey color is the core Greek-speaking area, in which Greek used to form a solid majority language among contiguous rural populations.
  45. ^ Kontosopoulos (1999); Trudgill (2003), 51.
  46. ^ Trudgill (2003), 51f.
  47. ^ Trudgill 2003: 53; Kontosopoulos 1999.
  48. ^ a b Trudgill 2003: 54.
  49. ^ Trudgill 2003: 56, quoting Newton 1972: 133.
  50. ^ a b Trudgill 2003: 57.
  51. ^ Trudgill 2003: 53, citing Newton 1972.
  52. ^ Trudgill 2003: 49, citing M. Triandaphyllides, Neoelliniki Grammatiki. Vol. 1: Istoriki Isagogi (Thessaloniki: M. Triandaphyllidis Foundation, 1938), 66-8; and C. Tzitzilis, "Neoellinikes dialekti ke neoelliniki dialektologia", in Egkiklopedikos Odigos gia ti Glossa, ed. A. F. Christidis (Thessaloniki: Kentro Ellinikis Glossas, 2001), 170.
  53. ^ Kontosopoulos 2008: 14, 66, 78.
  54. ^ The phenomenon is reported in Griko, Peloponnese, and on some Aegean islands (Kontosopoulos 2008: 74)
  55. ^ Kontosopoulos 1999.

varieties, modern, greek, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, ava. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The linguistic varieties of Modern Greek can be classified along two principal dimensions First there is a long tradition of sociolectal variation between the natural popular spoken language on the one hand and archaizing learned written forms on the other Second there is regional variation between dialects The competition between the popular and the learned registers see Diglossia culminated in the struggle between Dimotiki and Katharevousa during the 19th and 20th centuries As for regional dialects variation within the bulk of dialects of present day Greece is not particularly strong except for a number of outlying highly divergent dialects spoken by isolated communities Contents 1 Diglossia 1 1 Roots and history Demotic and Katharevousa 1 2 Standard Modern Greek 2 History of modern Greek dialects 2 1 Initial dialect differentiation 2 2 Historical literary dialects 3 Modern varieties 3 1 Outlying varieties 3 1 1 Tsakonian 3 1 2 Pontic Greek 3 1 3 Cappadocian Greek 3 1 4 Pharasiot Greek 3 1 5 Silliot Greek 3 1 6 Italiot Greek 3 1 7 Mariupolitan 3 1 8 Istanbul Greek 3 1 9 Other outlying varieties 3 2 Core dialects 3 2 1 Phonological features 3 2 2 Grammatical features 4 ReferencesDiglossia EditFurther information Greek language question Roots and history Demotic and Katharevousa Edit Ever since the times of Koine Greek in Hellenistic and Roman antiquity there was a competition between the naturally evolving spoken forms of Greek on the one hand and the use of artificially archaic learned registers on the other The learned registers employed grammatical and lexical forms in imitation of classical Attic Greek Atticism 1 This situation is known in modern linguistics as diglossia 2 During the Middle Ages Greek writing varied along a continuum between extreme forms of the high register very close to Attic and moderate forms much closer to the spoken Demotic 3 According to Manolis Triantafyllides the modern Greek language of the beginning of the 19th century as used in the demotic poetry of the time has very few grammatical differences from the vernacular language of the 15th century 4 During the early Modern Era a middle ground variety of moderately archaic written standard Greek emerged in the usage of educated Greeks such as the Phanariots and the Greek church its syntax was essentially Modern Greek 5 After the Greek War of Independence and the formation of the modern Greek state 1830 a political effort was made to purify this form of Greek by bringing it back to resemble classical Attic Greek more closely The result was Katharevousa ka8areyoysa lit the purifying one still a compromise form with basically Modern Greek syntax but re lexified with a much larger amount of Ancient Greek words and morphology 6 Katharevousa was used as an official language in administration education the church journalism and until the late 19th century in literature At the same time spoken Demotic while not recognised as an official language nevertheless developed a supra regional de facto standard variety From the late 19th century onwards written Demotic rather than Katharevousa became the primary medium of literature During much of the 20th century there were heated political conflicts over the use of either of the two varieties especially over the issue of their use in education Schools were forced to switch from one form to the other and back several times during the 20th century The conflict was resolved only after the overthrow of the Greek military junta of 1967 1974 whose strong ideological pro Katharevousa stance had ultimately contributed to bringing that language form into disrepute 7 In 1976 shortly after the restoration of democracy Demotic was finally adopted for use everywhere in education and became the language of the state for all official purposes 8 By that time however the form of Demotic used in practice was no longer the pure popular dialect but had begun to assimilate elements from the Katharevousa tradition again In 1982 diacritics were replaced by the monotonic orthography 9 Standard Modern Greek Edit Modern linguistics has come to call the resulting variety Standard Modern Greek to distinguish it from the pure original Demotic of earlier literature and traditional vernacular speech Greek authors sometimes use the term Modern Greek Koine Greek Neoellhnikh Koinh romanized Neoelliniki Koini lit Common Modern Greek reviving the term koine that otherwise refers to the common form of post classical Ancient Greek according to these scholars Modern Greek Koine is the supra dialect product of the composition of both the Demotic and Katharevousa 10 Indeed Standard Modern Greek has incorporated a large amount of vocabulary from the learned tradition especially through the registers of academic discourse politics technology and religion together with these it has incorporated a number of morphological features associated with their inflectional paradigms as well as some phonological features not originally found in pure Demotic History of modern Greek dialects EditThe first systematic scholarly treatment of the modern Greek dialects took place after the middle of the 19th century mainly thanks to the work of the prominent Greek linguist Georgios Hadjidakis 11 The absence of descriptive accounts of the speech of individual regions made the efforts of the researchers of the 19th century more difficult 12 Therefore the dialects forms are known to us only during their last phase from the middle of the 19th century and until the panhellenic dominance of the Standard Modern Greek Initial dialect differentiation Edit Modern linguistics is not in accord with the tendency of the 19th century scholars to regard modern Greek dialects as the direct descendants of the dialects of ancient Greek 13 According to the latest findings of scholarship modern Greek dialects are products of the dialect differentiation of Koine Greek and with the exception of Tsakonian and possibly Italiot Greek they have no correlation with the ancient dialects 14 It is difficult to monitor the evolution of Koine Greek and its splitting into the modern Greek dialects certain researchers make the hypothesis that the various local varieties were formed between the 10th and the 12th century as part of an evolution starting a few centuries before but it is difficult to draw some safer conclusions because of the absence of texts written in the vernacular language when this initial dialect differentiation occurred Very few paradigms of these local varieties are found in certain texts which however used mainly learned registers The first texts written in modern Greek dialects appear during the Early Renaissance in the islands of Cyprus and Crete 15 Historical literary dialects Edit Before the establishment of a common written standard of Demotic Greek there were various approaches to using regional variants of Demotic as a written language Dialect is recorded in areas outside Byzantine control first in legal and administrative documents and then in poetry The earliest evidence for literary dialects comes from areas under Latin control notably from Cyprus Crete and the Aegean islands From Cyprus under the Lusignan dynasty the 14th to 16th centuries legal documents prose chronicles and a group of anonymous love poems have survived Dialect archives also survive from 15th century Naxos 16 It is above all from the island of Crete during the period of Venetian rule from 1204 until its capture by the Ottomans in 1669 that dialect can be illustrated more fully Documents showing dialectal features exist from the end of the 12th century rapidly increasing in number from the 13th century onward 17 During the Cretan Renaissance in the 16th and early 17th centuries there existed a flourishing vernacular literature in the Cretan dialect based on Italian literary influences Its best known specimen today is the verse romance Erotokritos by Vitsentzos Kornaros 1553 1614 Later during the 18th and early 19th centuries the Ionian Islands then also under Italian rule became a centre of literary production in Demotic Greek The best known writer from that period was the poet Dionysios Solomos 1789 1857 who wrote the Greek national anthem Hymn to Liberty and other works celebrating the Greek Revolution of 1821 1830 His language became influential on the further course of standardisation that led to the emergence of the modern standard form of Demotic based on the south western dialects Modern varieties EditSpoken modern vernacular Greek can be divided into various geographical varieties There are a small number of highly divergent outlying varieties spoken by relatively isolated communities and a broader range of mainstream dialects less divergent from each other and from Standard Modern Greek which cover most of the linguistic area of present day Greece and Cyprus Native Greek scholarship traditionally distinguishes between dialects proper dialektos i e strongly marked distinctive varieties and mere idioms idiwma less markedly distinguished sub varieties of a language In this sense the term dialect is often reserved to only the main outlying forms listed in the next section Tsakonian Pontic Cappadocian and Italiot whereas the bulk of the mainstream spoken varieties of present day Greece are classified as idioms 18 However most English speaking linguists tend to refer to them as dialects emphasising degrees of variation only when necessary The geographical varieties of Greek are divided into three main groups Northern Semi Northern and Southern based on whether they make synizesis and vowel elision 19 Examples of Northern dialects are Rumelian Epirote except Thesprotia prefecture Thessalian Macedonian 20 Thracian The Southern category is divided into groups that include variety groups from Megara Aegina Athens Kymi Old Athenian and Mani Peninsula Maniot Peloponnese except Mani Cyclades Crete and Ionian Islands Dodecanese and Cyprus Part of Southern Albania known as Northern Epirus among Greeks 21 Asia Minor Modern Turkey Outlying varieties Edit See also Hellenic languages Tsakonian Edit Further information Tsakonian language Tsakonian Greek Our language is Tsakonian Ask and they ll tell you Greek sign in the town of Leonidio Tsakonian is a highly divergent variety sometimes classified as a separate language because of not being intelligible to speakers of standard Greek 22 It is spoken in a small mountainous area slightly inland from the east coast of the Peloponnese peninsula It is unique among all other modern varieties in that it is thought to derive not from the ancient Attic Ionian Koine but from Doric or from a mixed form of a late ancient Laconian variety of the Koine influenced by Doric 23 It used to be spoken earlier in a wider area of the Peloponnese including Laconia the historical home of the Doric Spartans Pontic Greek Edit Further information Pontic Greek Anatolian Greek until 1923 Demotic in yellow Pontic in orange Cappadocian Pharasiot and Silliot Greek are in green Green dots indicate non Pontic speaking villages in 1910 24 Pontic Greek varieties are those originally spoken along the eastern Black Sea coast of Asia Minor the historical region of Pontus in Turkey From there speakers of Pontic migrated to other areas along the Black Sea coast in Ukraine see Mariupol Russia and Georgia Through the forced population exchange after the Greco Turkish War 1919 1922 and the Treaty of Lausanne of 1923 the Pontic speakers of Turkey were expelled and moved to Greece Of the Pontic speakers in the ex Soviet Union many have immigrated to Greece more recently The number of Pontic Greeks currently maintaining the dialect is unclear 25 A small group of Muslim Pontic speakers remain in Turkey although their varieties show heavy structural convergence towards Turkish 26 Cappadocian Greek Edit Further information Cappadocian Greek Other varieties of Anatolian Greek that were influenced by the Turkish language besides Pontic are now almost extinct but were widely spoken until 1923 in central Turkey and especially in Cappadocia 27 In 1923 all Orthodox Christian inhabitants of Asia Minor were forced to emigrate to Greece after the Greek genocide 1919 1921 during the Population exchange between Greece and Turkey 28 In 2005 professors Mark Janse and Dimitris Papazachariou discovered that there are still native speakers of the Mistiot dialect of Cappadocian in Central and Northern Greece 29 Cappadocian Greek diverged from the other Byzantine Greek varieties earlier beginning with the Turkish conquests of central Anatolia in the 11th and 12th centuries and so developed several radical features such as the loss of the gender for nouns 24 Having been isolated from the crusader conquests Fourth Crusade and the later Venetian influence of the Greek coast it retained the Ancient Greek terms for many words that were replaced with Romance ones in Demotic Greek 24 The poet Rumi whose name means Roman referring to his residence amongst the Roman Greek speakers of Cappadocia wrote a few poems in Cappadocian Greek leaving one of the earliest attestations of the dialect 30 31 32 33 Pharasiot Greek Edit The Greek dialect spoken in Pharasa Farasa now Camlica village in Yahyali Kayseri and other nearby villages Afshar Koy Cukuri to the east of Cappadocia is not particularly close to Cappadocian It may be closer to Pontic or equally distant from both The Pharasiot priest Theodoridis published some folk texts In 2018 Metin Bagriacik published a thesis on Pharasiot Greek based on speakers remaining in Greece 34 Silliot Greek Edit The Greek dialect of Sille near Iconium Konya was the most divergent of the varieties of Asia Minor Greek citation needed Italiot Greek Edit Further information on Italiot Greek Griko dialect and Calabrian Greek Location map of the Griko speaking areas in Salento and Calabria Griko or Italiot Greek refers to the Greek varieties spoken in some areas of southern Italy a historical remnant of the ancient colonisation of Magna Graecia There are two small Griko speaking communities known as the Griko people who live in the Italian regions of Calabria the southern tip of the Italian peninsula and in Apulia its south easternmost corner These varieties too are believed to have developed on the basis of an originally Doric ancient dialect and have preserved some elements of it though to a lesser extent than Tsakonian 35 They subsequently adopted influences from ancient Koine but became isolated from the rest of the Greek speaking world after the decline of Byzantine rule in Italy during the Middle Ages Among their linguistic peculiarities besides influences from Italian is the preservation of the infinitive which was lost in the modern Greek of the Balkans Mariupolitan Edit Rumeika Rwmaiika or Mariupolitan Greek is a dialect spoken in about 17 villages around the northern coast of the Sea of Azov in southern Ukraine Mariupolitan Greek is closely related to Pontic Greek and evolved from the dialect of Greek spoken in the Crimea which was a part of the Pontic Empire of Trebizond until that state fell to the Ottomans in 1461 36 Thereafter the Crimean region remained independent and continued to exist as the Greek Principality of Theodoro The Greek speaking residents of the Crimea were invited by Catherine the Great to resettle in and found the new city of Mariupol after the Russo Turkish War 1768 74 to escape the then Muslim dominated Crimea 37 Its main features present certain similarities with both the Pontic e g the lack of synizesis of ia ea and the northern varieties of the core dialects e g the northern vocalism 38 Istanbul Greek Edit Main article Istanbul Greek dialect Istanbul Greek is a dialect of Greek spoken in Istanbul as well as by the Istanbul Greek emigre community in Athens It is characterized by a high frequency of loanwords and grammatical structures imported from other languages the main influences being Turkish French Italian and Armenian 39 while also preserving some archaic characteristics lost in other dialects Speakers are noted for their production of dark L and postalveolar affricates Other outlying varieties Edit In Asia Minor Greek varieties existed not only in the broader area of Cappadocia but also in the western coast The most characteristic is the dialect of Smyrna which had a number of distinguishing features such as certain differences in the accusative and genitive cases of the definite article the Greek speakers of the area had also incorporated into their dialect many French words Constantinopolitan Greek on the other side has very few dialectal features and it is very close to what scholars call Modern Greek Koine 40 Another Greek outlying dialect was spoken until the mid 20th century in Cargese on Corsica by descendants of 17th century settlers from the Mani peninsula 41 The dialect which is now regarded as extinct had preserved the main characteristics of the Mani dialect and had been also influenced by both the Corsican and the French language official language of the island after its union with France 42 Core dialects Edit Map showing the distribution of major Modern Greek dialect areas 43 The dialect of Northern Epirus not listed here belongs to the southern varieties Map showing important isoglosses between the traditional Modern Greek dialects c 1900 44 Purple Area of northern vocalism skiˈli gt skli Yellow Area of palatalisation of k gt tʃ kiriaˈki gt tʃirjaˈtʃi Green Area of palatalisation of k gt ts kiriaˈki gt tsirjaˈtsi Brown Geminated initial consonants ne gt nne Red Retention of word final n Dark brown Historical y gt u Unlike the above the varieties described below form a contiguous Greek speaking area which covers most of the territory of Greece They represent the vast majority of Greek speakers today As they are less divergent from each other and from the standard they are typically classified as mere idioms rather than dialects by Greek authors in the native Greek terminology The most prominent contrasts between the present day dialects are found between northern and southern varieties Northern varieties cover most of continental Greece down to the Gulf of Corinth while the southern varieties are spoken in the Peloponnese peninsula and the larger part of the Aegean and Ionian islands including the large southern islands of Crete and Cyprus The most salient defining marker of the northern varieties is their treatment of unstressed vowels so called northern vocalism while many southern varieties are characterised among other things by their palatalisation of velar consonants Between these areas in a contiguous area around the capital Athens i e the regions of Attica and neighbouring parts of Boeotia Euboia the Peloponnese and nearby islands there is a dialectal void where no distinctly marked traditional Greek dialects are found 45 This is due to the fact that these areas were once predominantly inhabited by speakers of Arvanitika Albanian The Greek spoken in this area today is the product of convergence between varieties of migrants who moved to the capital and its surroundings from various other parts of the country and it is close to the standard On the whole Standard Modern Greek is based predominantly on the southern dialects especially those of the Peloponnese At the fringes of this former Arvanitika speaking area there were once some enclaves of highly distinct traditional Greek dialects believed to have been remnants of a formerly contiguous Greek dialect area from the time before the Arvanitic settlement These include the old local dialect of Athens itself Old Athenian that of Megara to the west of Attica of Kymi in Euboia and of the island of Aegina These dialects are now extinct 46 The following linguistic markers have been used to distinguish and classify the dialects of Greece Many of these features are today characteristic only of the traditional rural vernaculars and may be socially stigmatised Younger urban speakers throughout the country tend to converge towards accents closer to the standard language with Cyprus being an exception to this Phonological features Edit Further information Modern Greek phonology Northern vocalism high vowel loss In the north unstressed high vowels i and u are typically deleted e g skon vs standard ˈskoni dust Unstressed mid vowels e and o are raised to i and u instead e g piˈdi vs standard peˈdi child Subtypes of this phenomenon can be distinguished as follows in Extreme Northern dialects these two processes apply throughout In mid Northern dialects the deletion of i and u applies only to word final vowels Semi Northern dialects only have the deletion of word final i and u but not the raising of e and o 47 The latter include Mykonos Skiros Lefkada and the urban dialect of the Greeks of Constantinople Palatalisation Standard Greek has an allophonic alternation between velar consonants k ɡ x ɣ and palatalised counterparts c ɟ c ʝ before front vowels i e In southern dialects the palatalisation goes further towards affricates e g tʃe vs standard ce and Subtypes can be distinguished that have either palato alveolar tʃ dʒ ʃ ʒ or alveolo palatal sounds tɕ dʑ ɕ ʑ The former are reported for Cyprus the latter for Crete among others 48 Tsitakism In a core area in which the palatalisation process has gone even further covering mainly the Cycladic Islands palatalised k is further fronted to alveolar t s and thus merges with the original phoneme t s 49 This phenomenon is known in Greek as tsitakism tsitakismos It was also shared by Old Athenian Ypsilon A highly archaic feature shared by Tsakonian the Maniot dialect and the Old Athenian enclave dialects is the divergent treatment of historical y lt y gt While this sound merged to i everywhere else these dialects have u instead e g ˈksulo vs standard ˈksilo wood 48 Geminate consonants Most Modern Greek varieties have lost the distinctively long geminate consonants found in Ancient Greek However the dialects of the south eastern islands including Cyprus have preserved them and even extended them to new environments such as word initial positions Thus the word lt nai gt yes is pronounced with a distinctively long initial nː in Cypriot and there are minimal pairs such as lt fyllo gt ˈfilːo leaf vs lt fylo gt ˈfilo gender which are pronounced exactly the same in other dialects but distinguished by consonant length in Cypriot 50 Dark l A distinctive marker of modern northern vernaculars especially of Macedonia is the use of a dark velarised ɫ sound Medial fricative deletion Some dialects of the Aegean Islands especially in the Dodecanese have a tendency of deleting intervocalic voiced fricatives v d ɣ e g meˈalo vs standard meˈɣalo big 51 Nasals and voiced plosives Dialects differ in their phonetic treatment of the result of the assimilation of voiceless plosives with preceding nasals All dialects have a voicing of the plosive in this position but while some dialects also have an audible segment of prenasalisation others do not thus lt pompos gt pompos transmitter may be realised as either poˈᵐbos or poˈbos 52 Furthermore prenasalisation tends to be preserved in more formal registers regardless of geography In informal speech it tends to be more common in northern varieties Lack of synizesis of ia ea gt ja Standard Greek and most dialects have a pattern whereby Ancient Greek e or i immediately before an accented later stressed vowel have turned into a non syllabic glide j citation needed for instance in lt paidia gt peˈdʝa children from Ancient Greek lt paidia gt pa idia In some dialects this process has not taken place or has done so only partially These dialects display either full preservation of e i or a schwa sound e leading to forms such as lt fwlea gt foˈle a nest and lt paidia gt peˈdi a children The phenomenon is common in Griko and Pontic It is also reported in Mani and Kythira 53 On the other hand in some dialects that have j the glide gets further reduced and deleted after a preceding sibilant s z leading to forms like lt nhsa gt niˈsa islands instead of standard lt nhsia gt niˈsca de palatalisation of sibilants 54 Grammatical features Edit Further information Modern Greek grammar Final n Most Modern Greek varieties have lost word final n once a part of many inflectional suffixes of Ancient Greek in all but very few grammatical words The south eastern islands have preserved it in many words e g ˈipen vs standard ˈipe he said tiˈrin vs standard tiˈri cheese 50 inda versusti In Standard Greek the interrogative pronoun what is ti In most of the Aegean Islands except at its geographical fringe Rhodes in the south east Lemnos Thasos and the Sporades in the north and Andros in the west as well as on Cyprus it is inda 55 Indirect objects All Modern Greek dialects have lost the dative case In some dialects this has resulted in a merger between the dative and the genitive whereas in others there has been a merger between the dative and the accusative In the standard and in the southern dialects the personal pronoun forms used to express indirect objects are those of the genitive case as in example 1 below In northern dialects like Macedonian 20 mainly in Thessaloniki Constantinople Rhodes and in Mesa Mani the accusative forms are used instead 20 28 as in example 2 In plural only the accusative forms are used both in southern and northern dialects citation needed 1 Standard Greek Soyyou GEN dinwI give to bibliothe book 2 Northern Greek Seyou ACC dinwI give to bibliothe book I give you the book References Edit Horrocks Geoffrey 1997 Greek a history of the language and its speakers London Longman Ch 5 5 Ferguson Charles A 1959 Diglossia Word 15 325 340 Horrocks 1997 ch 10 Trapp Erich 1993 Learned and Vernacular Literature in Byzantium Dichotomy or Symbiosis Dumbarton Oaks Papers 47 115 129 doi 10 2307 1291674 JSTOR 1291674 Although scholars have not been inclined to transpose to Byzantine literature the former conflict between ka8areyoysa and dhmotikh in modern Greek the outward appearance of a clear dichotomy in learned and vernacular literature lasts especially in the manuals bibliography and lexica Triantafyllides Manolis Lakonas Kleandros Stavrou Thrasyvoulos Tzartzanos Achilleas Favis Vassilios Andriotis Nikolaos 1988 Reprint edition of the 1941 first edition Modern Greek Grammar in Greek Thessaloniki M Triandaphyllidis Foundation pp 5 6 ISBN 960 231 027 8 Horrocks ch 15 Horrocks ch 17 Horrocks ch 17 6 Law 309 1976 About the Organization and Administration of the General Education Presidential Decree 207 1982 Babiniotis 2007 29 Browning Robert 1983 The Dialects of Modern Greek Medieval and Modern Greek Cambridge University Press p 119 ISBN 0 521 29978 0 Kontosopoulos Nikolaos G 2007 Dialects and Idioms of the Modern Greek Papyros Larousse Britannica in Greek Vol 53 Greece Language Antiquity Athens Papyros pp 149 150 ISBN 978 960 6715 39 6 Browning 1983 119 Scholars of the generation of F W Mullach sought to find Dorisms and Aeolisms in the medieval and Modern Greek dialects or even went further back seeking the origin of certain of their characteristics in primitive Indo European Browning 1983 119 Kontosopoulos 2007 149 Kontosopoulos 2007 149 Alexiou Margaret 2002 The Emergence of Dialect Literature Cyprus and Crete After Antiquity Greek Language Myth and Metaphor Cornell University Press pp 28 29 ISBN 0 8014 3301 0 Cretan dialect Cyprus literary Alexiou 2002 29 For the distinction between Greek dialects and Greek idioms see Kontosopoulos Nikolaos 1999 Dialektoi kai idiomata In Manos Kopidaks et al eds Istoria tis ellinikis glossas Athens Elliniko Logotechniko kai Istoriko Archeio 188 205 Kontosopoulos 2008 2 3 Trudgill 2003 49 Modern Greek dialects A preliminary Classification in Journal of Greek Linguistics 4 2003 p 54 64 Dialekti are those varieties that are linguistically very different from Standard Greek Idiomata are all the other varieties Tromaktiko Oi Neoellhnikes dialektoi a b c Studies in Greek Syntax 1999 Pg 98 99 Artemis Alexiadou Geoffrey C Horrocks Melita Stavrou 1999 Preview in Google Books ISBN 978 0 7923 5290 7 Nick Nicholas Appendix A History amp Diatopy of Greek Archived 2004 12 06 at the Wayback Machine The story of pu The grammaticalisation in space and time of a Modern Greek complementiser December 1998 University of Melbourne p 20 http www ethnologue com show language asp code tsdC F amp F M Voegelin Classification and Index of the World s Languages 1977 Elsevier pg 148 149 Brian Joseph Language Contact and the Development of Negation in Greek and How Balkan Slavic Helps to Illuminate the Situation online accessed 7 April 2009 Horrocks ch 4 4 3 C Brixhe 2007 A modern approach to the ancient dialects in A F Christides ed A history of Ancient Greek Cambridge University Press p 499 a b c Dawkins R M 1916 Modern Greek in Asia Minor A study of dialect of Silly Cappadocia and Pharasa Cambridge Cambridge University Press 500 000 living in 300 villages Pontic Greek speakers according to Myrtsioti Time Resistant Dialects Archived 2011 07 21 at the Wayback Machine 300 000 according to Trudgill 2003 48 Mackridge Peter 1987 Greek Speaking Moslems of North East Turkey Prolegomena to Study of the Ophitic Sub Dialect of Pontic Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 11 115 137 Quoted in Horrocks ch 14 2 Dawkins R M 1916 Modern Greek in Asia Minor A study of dialect of Silly Cappadocia and Pharasa Cambridge Cambridge University Press Janse The Cappadocian Language permanent dead link a b Symeonides Ch P 2007 Greek language Papyros Larousse Britannica Editions Papyros ISBN 978 960 6715 39 6 Cappadocian Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Roosevelt Academy Janse The Cappadocian Language permanent dead link Dedes D 1993 Poihmata toy Maylana Roymh Ta Istorika 10 18 19 3 22 Meyer G 1895 Die griechischen Verse in Rababnama Byzantinische Zeitschrift 4 401 411 Untitled Document Archived from the original on 2012 08 05 Retrieved 2014 10 24 http www khamush com greek gr htm Metin Bagriacik Pharasiot Greek Word order and clause structure Ghent University 2018 Horrocks ch 14 2 3 Dawkins Richard M THE PONTIC DIALECT OF MODERN GREEK IN ASIA MINOR AND RUSSIA Transactions of the Philological Society 36 1 1937 15 52 Greeks of the Steppe The Washington Post 10 November 2012 Retrieved 25 October 2014 Kontosopoulos 2008 109 Matthew John Hadodo January 2018 Pockets of Change Salience and Sound Change in Istanbul Greek Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference of Modern Greek Dialects and Linguistic Theory Kontosopoulos 2008 114 116 Trudgill 2003 60 Blanken Gerard 1951 Les Grecs de Cargese Corse Recherches sur leur langue et sur leur histoire Leiden A W Sijthoff see review in Language 30 1954 278 781 1 Nicholas The deletion of final s in Mani and Corsica Archived 2012 02 13 at the Wayback Machine See Kontosopoulos 2008 82 83 who regards Cargese as an idiom Based on Brian Newton The Generative Interpretation of Dialect A Study of Modern Greek Phonology Cambridge 1972 ISBN 0 521 08497 0 Map based on Peter Trudgill 2003 Modern Greek dialects A preliminary Classification Journal of Greek Linguistics 4 54 64 pdf Archived 2007 09 26 at the Wayback Machine Shown in grey color is the core Greek speaking area in which Greek used to form a solid majority language among contiguous rural populations Kontosopoulos 1999 Trudgill 2003 51 Trudgill 2003 51f Trudgill 2003 53 Kontosopoulos 1999 a b Trudgill 2003 54 Trudgill 2003 56 quoting Newton 1972 133 a b Trudgill 2003 57 Trudgill 2003 53 citing Newton 1972 Trudgill 2003 49 citing M Triandaphyllides Neoelliniki Grammatiki Vol 1 Istoriki Isagogi Thessaloniki M Triandaphyllidis Foundation 1938 66 8 and C Tzitzilis Neoellinikes dialekti ke neoelliniki dialektologia in Egkiklopedikos Odigos gia ti Glossa ed A F Christidis Thessaloniki Kentro Ellinikis Glossas 2001 170 Kontosopoulos 2008 14 66 78 The phenomenon is reported in Griko Peloponnese and on some Aegean islands Kontosopoulos 2008 74 Kontosopoulos 1999 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Varieties of Modern Greek amp oldid 1120404979, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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