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The Greek alphabet is an alphabet that has been used to write the Greek language since about the 9th century BC. It was the first alphabet in the narrow sense, that is, a writing system using a separate symbol for each vowel and consonant alike. It is the oldest alphabetic script in use today. The letters are also used to represent numbersGreek numerals—in the same sorts of contexts as Roman numerals. Besides writing modern Greek, today its letters are used as symbols in mathematics and science, particle names in physics, as names of stars, in the names of fraternities and sororities, in the naming of supernumerary tropical cyclones, and for other purposes. The Greek alphabet originated as a modification of the Phoenician alphabet and in turn gave rise to the Gothic, Glagolitic, Cyrillic, Coptic, and possibly the Armenian alphabets, as well as the Latin alphabet, as documented in History of the alphabet. The Greek alphabet is unrelated to Linear B and the Cypriot syllabary, earlier writing systems for Greek.

Main table


The Greek letters and their derivations are as follows (pronunciations transcribed using the International Phonetic Alphabet):

AlephBethGimelDalethHeZayinHethTethYodhKaphLamedhMemNunSamekh'AyinPeReshShinTawWaw'Ayin
Letter Name Pronunciation Corresponding
Phoenician
letter
Transliteration1
Greek English Ancient Modern Ancient Modern
Α α Alpha a a
Β β Beta b v
Γ γ Gamma ] before or ;
otherwise
g gh, g, y
Δ δ Delta d d, dh
Ε ε Epsilon e e
Ζ ζ Zeta , later z z
Η η Eta e, ē i
Θ θ Theta th th
Ι ι Iota , i i
Κ κ Kappa before or ;
otherwise
k k
Λ λ Lambda l l
Μ μ Mu m m
Ν ν Nu n n
Ξ ξ Xi x x, ks
Ο ο Omicron o o
Π π Pi p p
Ρ ρ Rho , r (: rh) r
Σ σ
ς
(final)
Sigma s s
Τ τ Tau t t
Υ υ Upsilon u, y (between consonants) y, v, f
Φ φ Phi origin disputed (see text) ph f
Χ χ Chi before or ;
otherwise
ch ch, kh
Ψ ψ Psi ps ps
Ω ω Omega o, ō o
  1. For details and different transliteration systems see Transliteration of Greek into English.

Some of the letters had different pronunciations in pre-classical times or in non-Attic dialects. For details, see History of the Greek alphabet.

Obsolete letters

The following letters are not part of the standard Greek alphabet, but were in use in pre-classical times or in certain dialects. The letters digamma, qoppa, and sampi were also used in Greek numerals.

WawTsadeQoph
Letter Name Pronunciation Corresponding
Phoenician
letter
Transliteration
Digamma w
San s
Qoppa q
Sampi Origin disputed ss or –

Letter combinations and diphthongs


Letters Pronunciation Latin transliteration
-
archaic classical modern
-
ᾰι, αι *ae
-
ᾱι, **ā
-
ει**ī
-
ηι, **ē
-
οι *oe, ī (final)
-
ῠι, υι**ui
-
ῡι, υι**ui
-
ωι, **ō
-
ᾰυ, αυ *" target="_blank" >before vowel or voiced consonant;
[ before voiceless sound
au, av
-
ᾱυ, αυ *" target="_blank" >before vowel or voiced consonant;
[ before voiceless sound
au, āv
-
ευ *" target="_blank" >before vowel or voiced consonant;
[ before voiceless sound
eu, ev
-
ηυ *" target="_blank" >before vowel or voiced consonant;
[ before voiceless sound
eu, ēv
-
ου/>*ū, ou
-
ωυ*****ōy
-
γγ* *" target="_blank" >in formal speech (palatalised to or ),
but often reduced to (palatalised to before or );
also pronounced *" target="_blank" >in some contexts (palatalised to [ before )
ng
-
γκ* *" target="_blank" >at the beginning of a word (palatalised to before or );
* before or ),
but often reduced to (palatalised to before or )
nc, nk
-
γξ***nx, nks
-
γχ***" target="_blank" >before or ;
[ otherwise
nch, nkh
-
μπ href="http://articles.gourt.com/en/Voiced bilabial plosive"> at the beginning of a word;
[ otherwise, but often reduced to
mp
-
ντ href="http://articles.gourt.com/en/Voiced alveolar plosive"> at the beginning of a word;
[ otherwise, but often reduced to
nt
* Some scholars see (agma) as a phoneme in its own right.

** The diphthong ωυ was found in Ionic and in certain Hebrew transcriptions in the Greek Bible, but it did not occur in Attic, and was gradually lost in Koine. Where ωυ was atticized, it was often split into two separate vowel syllables, hence the Latin transcription ōy. Perhaps the clearest example of this is the Biblical Greek name , Moses, which was atticized as , then adapted to early Christian Latin as Mōysēs, from where it became Spanish Moisés, French Moïse, etc. The modern Greek form is , whereas the modern Latin Vulgate form is Mōsēs.

Ligatures


Before the days of printing, scribes made use of a number of ligatures to save space, in Greek as in other languages. The ligature for ου — resembling a V above an O — is still sometimes seen. For a modern use of this in the Latin alphabet, see Ou (letter)

In printed 17th-century English works, there sometimes occurs a ligature of Οσ (a small sigma inside a capital omega) for a terminal "os".

See also ϗ, Ϛ.

History


According to legends recounted by Herodotus, the alphabet was first introduced to Greece by a Phoenician named Cadmus, who also figures in other Greek mythology.

Historically, the Greek alphabet emerged several centuries after the fall of Mycenaean civilisation and consequent extinction of its Linear B script, an early Greek writing system. Linear B is descended from Linear A, which was developed by the Minoans, whose language was probably unrelated to Greek; consequently the Minoan syllabary did not provide an ideal medium for the transliteration of Greek language sounds. The Greek alphabet we recognize today arose after the illiterate Greek Dark Ages — the period between the downfall of Mycenae (c. 1200 B.C.) and the rise of Ancient Greece, which begins with the appearance of the epics of Homer, around 800 B.C., and the institution of the Ancient Olympic Games in 776 B.C.

The most notable change in the Greek alphabet, as an adaptation of the Phoenician alphabet, is the introduction of written vowels, without which Greek — unlike Phoenician — would be unintelligible. In fact most alphabets that contain vowels are derived ultimately from Greek, although there are exceptions (Hangul, Orkhon script, Ge'ez alphabet, Indic alphabets, and Old Hungarian script). The first vowels were alpha, e (later epsilon), iota, o (later omicron), and u (later upsilon), modifications of Semitic glottal, aspirate, or glide consonants that were mostly superfluous in Greek: /'/ (aleph), /h/ (he), /j/ (yodh), /`/ (ayin), and /w/ (waw), respectively. In eastern Greek, which lacked breaths entirely, the letter eta (from the Semitic aspirate consonant , heth) was also used for a long e, and eventually the letter omega was introduced for a long o. Vowels were originally not used in Semitic alphabets, although even in the very old Ugaritic alphabet matres lectionis were used, i.e. consonant signs were used to denote vowels.

Greek also introduced three new consonants, appended to the end of the alphabet as they were developed. These consonants made up for the lack of comparable aspirates in Phoenician. In west Greek, Χ was used for // and Ψ for // — hence the value of our letter x, derived from the western Greek alphabet. Over the middle ages these aspirates disappeared, so now theta, phi, and chi stand for //, //, and //. The origin of those letters is disputed.

The letter san was used at variance with sigma, and by classical times the latter won out, san disappearing from the alphabet. The letters waw (later called digamma) and qoppa disappeared, too, the former only needed for the western dialects and the latter never really needed at all. These lived on in the Ionic numeral system, however, which consisted of writing a series letters with precise numerical values. Sampi (apparently in a rare local glyph form from Ionia) was introduced at the end — to stand for 900. Thousands were written using a mark at the upper left ('A for 1000, etc).

Originally there were several variants of the Greek alphabet, most importantly western (Chalcidian) and eastern (Ionic) Greek; the former gave rise to the Old Italic alphabet and thence to the Latin alphabet. Athens took the Ionic script to be its standard in 403 BC, and shortly thereafter the other versions disappeared. By then Greek was always written left to right, but originally it had been written right to left (with asymmetrical characters flipped), and in-between written either way — or, most likely, boustrophedon, so that the lines alternate direction.

During the Middle ages, the Greek scripts underwent changes paralleling those of the Roman alphabet: while the old forms were retained as a monumental script, uncial and eventually minuscule hands came to dominate. The letter σ is even written ς at the ends of words, paralleling the use of the long and short s at the time. Aristophanes of Byzantium also introduced the process of accenting Greek letters for easier pronunciation.

Because Greek minuscules arose at a (much) later date, no historic minuscule actually exists for san. Minuscule forms for the other letters were only used numerically. For number 6, modern Greeks use an old ligature called stigma (, ) instead of digamma or use στ if it is not available. For 90 they use modern z-shaped qoppa forms: , (Note that some web browser/font combinations will show the other qoppa here).

Diacritics


Vowels can carry diacritics, namely accents and breathings. The accents are the acute accent (´), the grave accent (`), and the circumflex (῀). They mark the stressed syllable. The breathings are the spiritus asper (῾), marking an sound at the beginning of a word, and the spiritus lenis (᾽), marking the absence of an [h sound at the beginning of a word. The letter rho, although not a vowel, when at the beginning of a word, always carries a spiritus asper. A double rho, although always in the middle of a word, is written with a spiritus lenis on the first rho and a spiritus asper on the second one. A related mark is the diaeresis marking the separate pronunciation of vowel sounds. In 1982, the old system, known as "polytonic", was simplified to become the "monotonic" system, which is now official in Greece. The accents were replaced by a single diacritic, the tonos, and the breathings were abolished.

Use of the Greek alphabet for other languages


The primary use of the Greek alphabet has always been to write the Greek language. However, at various times and in various places, it has also been used to write other languages.see S. Macrakis, 1996 for bibliography

Early examples:

In more modern times:

Greek encodings


A variety of encodings have been used for Greek online, many of them documented in RFC 1947 "Greek Character Encoding for Electronic Mail Messages".

The two principal ones still used today are ISO/IEC 8859-7 and Unicode. ISO 8859-7 supports only monotonic orthography; Unicode supports polytonic orthography.

Greek in Unicode

Unicode supports polytonic orthography well enough for ordinary continuous text in modern and ancient Greek, and even many archaic forms for epigraphy. With the use of combining characters, Unicode also supports Greek philology and dialectology and various other specialized requirements. However, most current implementations of Unicode do not support combining characters well, so, though alpha with macron and acute can be represented as U+03B1 U+0304 U+0301, this rarely renders well: .

For extended discussion of problematic Greek letter forms in Unicode see Greek Unicode Issues.

There are 2 main blocks of Greek characters in Unicode. The first is "Greek and Coptic" (U+0370 to U+03FF). This block is based on ISO 8859-7 and is sufficient to write Modern Greek. There are also some archaic letters and Greek-based technical symbols.

This block also supports the Coptic language. Formerly most Coptic letters shared codepoints with similar-looking Greek letters; but in many scholarly works, both scripts occur, with quite different letter shapes, so as of Unicode 4.1, Coptic and Greek were disunified. Those Coptic letters with no Greek equivalents still remain in this block.

To write polytonic Greek, one may use combining diacritical marks or the precomposed characters in the "Greek Extended" block (U+1F00 to U+1FFF).

Greek and Coptic
 0123456789ABCDEF
0370             
0380       
0390 ΑΒΓΔΕΖΗΘΙΚΛΜΝΞΟ
03A0 ΠΡ ΣΤΥΦΧΨΩ
03B0 αβγδεζηθικλμνξο
03C0 πρστυφχψω 
03D0
03E0 (Coptic letters here)
03F0

Greek Extended (precomposed polytonic Greek)
 0123456789ABCDEF
1F00
1F10     
1F20
1F30
1F40     
1F50     
1F60
1F70   
1F80
1F90
1FA0
1FB0  
1FC0  
1FD0    
1FE0
1FF0     

Combining and letter-free diacritics

Combining and spacing (letter-free) diacritical marks pertaining to Greek language are:

combiningspacingsampledescription
U+0300U+0060( )"varia / grave accent"
U+0301U+00B4, U+0384( )"oxia / tonos / acute accent"
U+0304U+00AF( )"macron"
U+0306U+02D8( )"vrachy / breve"
U+0308U+00A8( )"dialytika / diaeresis"
U+0313 ( )"psili / comma above" (spiritus lenis)
U+0314 ( )"dasia / reversed comma above" (spiritus asper)
U+0342 ( )"perispomeni" (circumflex)
U+0343 ( )"koronis" (= U+0313)
U+0344U+0385( )"dialytika tonos" (deprecated, = U+0308 U+0301)
U+0345U+037A( )"ypogegrammeni / iota subscript".

Bibliography


  • Humez, Alexander and Nicholas, Alpha to omega: the life & times of the Greek alphabet, Godine, 1981, ISBN 087923377X. A popular history, more about Greek roots in English than about the alphabet itself.
  • Michael S. Macrakis, ed., Greek letters: from tablets to pixels, proceedings of a conference sponsored by the Greek Font Society, Oak Knoll Press, 1996, ISBN 1884718272. Includes papers on history, typography, and character coding by Hermann Zapf, Matthew Carter, Nicolas Barker, John A. Lane, Kyle McCarter, Jerôme Peignot, Pierre MacKay, Silvio Levy, et al.
  • Jeffery, Lilian Hamilton, The local scripts of archaic Greece: a study of the origin of the Greek alphabet and its development from the eighth to the fifth centuries B.C., Oxford, 1961, ISBN 0198140614.
  • Macrakis, Stavros M., "Character codes for Greek: Problems and modern solutions" in Macrakis, 1996. Includes discussion of the Greek alphabet used for languages other than Greek. *
  • Robert Elsie, "Albanian Literature in Greek Script: the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth-Century Orthodox Tradition in Albanian Writing", Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 15:20 (1991) *.

See also


External links


Greek letters | Hellenic scripts | Alphabetic writing systems

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