Koine Greek: Alphabet

From WikiChristian
Revision as of 01:09, 26 December 2008 by Aquatiki (talk | contribs) (Reverted edits by SantaClausCameOnYourMom (Talk); changed back to last version by Cleaner)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Greek Alphabet
RELATED TOPICS
SERMONS, ESSAYS AND OPINIONS
CONTENTS

The Koine Greek alphabet consists of 24 letters. All Greek was originally written in upper case, without spaces between words, and without added punctuation, but today, most texts are are written in lower case, with punctuation and spaces between words.

Alphabet

Below is a table showing the letters.

Letter name Lower Case Upper Case Transliteration Pronunciation
alpha α Α a father
beta β Β b beta
gamma γ Γ g gamma
delta δ Δ d delta
epsilon ε Ε e epsilon
zêta ζ Ζ z zêta
êta η Η ê or ē obey
thêta θ Θ th thêta
iota ι Ι i
kappa κ Κ k kappa
lambda λ Λ l or L lambda
mu μ Μ m mu
nu ν Ν n nu
xi ξ Ξ ks axiom
omicron ο Ο o omicron
pi π Π p pi
rho ρ Ρ r rho
sigma σ / ς Σ s sigma
tau τ Τ t tau
upsilon υ Υ u sometimes y oops
phi φ Φ ph father
chi χ Χ ch
psi ψ Ψ ps
omega ω Ω ô or ō obey

Diphthongs

Diphthong Pronunciation
ΑΙ 'ai' as in aisle
ΕΙ 'ei' as in freight (identical to 'Η')
ΟΙ 'oi' as in oil
ΑΥ 'ow' as in sow
ΟΥ 'oo' as in fool
ΥΙ 'ooe' as in gooey
ΕΥ *


* 'ευ' is both hard and controversial. There is some evidence to suggest that is was pronounced 'ew' (as in "Ew, that's gross!") or simply 'yu'. What has been taught for ages, however, is 'eh-oo', as sound not present in English.

There are also version of several vowels with a small iota underneath (or beside in the case of capitols): ᾼ ᾳ, ῌ ῃ, ῼ ῳ. It is believed that these represent ancient diphthongs, but the pronunciation is not altered in the time of any Greek writing we can know.

We have chosen not to include ι-subscripts on WikiChristian, partly because most browsers display them incorrectly.

Accents

There are three possible accents that can be put on Greek vowels: the acute ´, the grave (pronounces 'grahv') ` and the circumflex. The circumflex should like an upside crescent over the vowel, but some fonts use the caron (^) or even the tilde (~). It is thought the these different symbols represented rising and falling pitch, like modern Chinese, but by the time of our literature, they only indicate accent or stress.

  • ἀρχῇ - ar
  • λόγος - logos

Over the initial syllable of word that begins with a vowel, there will always be either a rough () or a smooth () breathing sign. Rough means a 'h' sound and smooth means a lack of extra sound. A 'Ρ' (Rho), in the initial position, also taking a breathing sign, typically the rough. How precisely this altered pronunciation is not known.

We also do not include accents here on WikiChristian, since it would make searches extremely difficult, and also, because most browsers don't render them correctly.

Punctuation

This article is a stub. You can help WikiChristian by expanding it. For help please read the WikiChristian Tutorial and our writing guide.

Quotes

Links


Return to Christianity -> Bible -> Koine Greek

W8MD

Note to users: The wiki is currently operating in safe mode. Editing is limited to users with certain privileges in order to deal with spam. You can create a new user account, and confirm your email ID in order to obtain ability to edit pages. Learn how to be an editor or sysop at WikiChristian.