CONRAD CARL A Compendium of Ancient Greek Phonology
CONRAD CARL A Compendium of Ancient Greek Phonology
CONRAD CARL A Compendium of Ancient Greek Phonology
OVERVIEW
(b) An understanding of phonology provides a key to understanding dialectal variations within a language.
Thus armed, the student of Attic Greek can relate the Doric and the Attic to proto-Greek
*senti; or one can relate the Lesbian Aeolic forms and and the corresponding Attic
forms, and , to proto-Greek *pantya and *selasna. Thus, although one's study has
been concentrated on the dialect of 5th and 4th century Athens, it will be possible to undertake the reading
of Homeric or Lesbian Aeolic poetry (Sappho, Alcaeus) or of Ionic prose (Herodotus) with a minimum of
difficulty.
(c) An understanding of phonology provides a key to recognition of cognates derived from the same root, such
as the aorist-tense form (epnthon) and the future-tense form (penthsomai) or the
present-tense form (sekho) and the aorist infinitive (skhein). Such undrstanding lightens
the burden of learning principal parts of verbs of apparently anomalous forms such as:
(d) Of most immediate importance to the beginning student of Ancient Greek, phonology reveals the
underlying logic of conjugational and declensional paradigms of verbs and nouns, adjectives and pronouns,
even where the forms observed in such paradigms seem superficially inconsistent.
Indo-European long *a survived in most Greek dialects, but in Attic-Ionic it evolved into a long flat e
(English drag), which subsequently became assimilated to long open e (French tête), spelled . In Ionic
dialect this change of quality was carried through uniformly, while in the Attic dialect it was inhibited when
the original * was preceded by or . Note the following dialectal equivalents:
Ancient Greek had originally two values: (1) long closed e as in < and (2) the true
diphthong as in < . In late Attic both were assimilated to This explains the variant spellings
of the second-person singular present middle ending in omega-verbs: is the earlier spelling, the later
spelling of what, before the loss of medial sigma in the ending, was .
The long closed e which is spelled ei may result from contraction of + . Thus:
<
<
or it may result from compensatory l;engthening of after the loss of a following consonant. Thus:
<
<
Ancient Greek was originally a long closed o (English blow), but in Attic dialect it became u (English
boot), while Attic (originally short and long u as in Latin) acquired the value of the French u, the German ü.
This change in the quality of the Greek upsilon explains why the Romans used their own u to transliterate
Greek but carried over the Greek letter to represent a sound not expressed in the existing Roman alphabet.
The long closed o which is spelled by Greek may result from contraction of + (thus:
<
<
<
<
<
or it may result from compensatory lengthening of after loss of a following consonant (thus:
<
<
A COMPENDIUM OF ANCIENT GREEK PHONOLOGY 66
The ancient Greek long-vowel diphthongs tended to lose their appended iotas and to degenerate
into the simple long vowels . They lasted longer in final open position, where we commonly see them
in dative-singular forms of first- and second-declension nouns: ; . On the other hand,
they probably lost diphthongal pronunciation in medial position as the variant spellings in Hellenistic Greek
papyri would seem to indicate: = ; = ; = .
The orthographic convention of indicating the lost appended iota of the dipthong by means of an iota subscript
is Byzantine. Hellenistic manuscripts and papyri show simple long vowels, as the dative singular form t
.
7. Vowels: Attic Vowel contractions: In the following table, the first vowel is given in the left-hand column, the
second in the top row, and the result contractions in the box where the columns intersect.)
1. It will be noted from the table that, generally speaking, a-vowels prevail over e-vowels; o-vowels prevail
over both a-vowels and e-vowels.
2. Strictly speaking, + = long rather than ; however, as long changes to in the Attic dialect, the
resultant contraction normally appears as . Thus: = ; =
. Yet this change may be inhibited when the long is preceded by or . Thus:
= ; = .
3. Vowel contraction may also occur between words, especially when the definite article or the
conjunction is followed by a word begininning with or (crasis): = ;
= ; = ; = .
8. Vowels: Quantitative Metathesis: In the Attic dialect, the combinations and tended to shift the vowel
quantity from the first to the second vowel: . This substantially affects the declension of several
categories of nouns and adjectives:
(a) Third-declension stems that alternate between vocalic or diphthongal forms before a consonantal ending
and vowel-sonant forms before a vocalic ending ( y, --> ) show metathesis after the loss
of the sonant:
y y > >
> >
> >
> > (gen. sg. "ship")
(b) "Attic declension" of nouns and adjectives originally formed with sonants which were lost:
(c) A related phenomenon is the shortening of the first of two contiguous long vowels:
> >
>
A COMPENDIUM OF ANCIENT GREEK PHONOLOGY 67
The loss of one of a pair of consonants following a short vowel is compensated for by the lengthening of the
preceding short vowel. When this occurs:
short --> long --> short --> long short --> long
(a) This process is particularly noticeable in active participles, where the participial sign enters into
conjunction with a sigma:
(b) This process is also significant in liquid aorists where the sigma of the First Aorist is lost after or
and the preceding vowel, if short, is compensatorily lengthened:
(a) "The only stable constituent portion of an Indo-European morphological element (root, suffix, or ending) is
the consonantal portion. The vocalic portion is always subject to alternation." --Meillet
In English, for instance,one can readily recognize the r/ /d complex as the stable consonantal portion
characterized alternately by the vowels *i, *o, *i in the principal parts of the verb ride, rode, ridden.
Alternation of vowels affects not only the principal word-roots of nouns and verbs, however,but also the
suffixes constituting, e.g., agent nouns in Greek: in but in , in ,
in , and in , or the mood-signs of verbs as optative in Greek: .
In the most common type of Greek verb, the "thematic" verb, an alternating short vowel provides the link
between the stem and the ending: . Lengthened forms of the same vowel ( ) serve as
the subjunctive mood sign: .
(b) In its full range, Indo-European vowel gradation comprises five grades: two short-vowel grades: , ;
two long-vowel grades: ; and a zero-grade wherein the consonantal portionis linked without a vowel
(or with the second element of a diphthong constituted by the long- or short-vowel grades). Although all
five grades are rarely represented for any single root in Greek, all are to be seen in the agent-noun suffix
forms cited above:
(a) The most common type of vocalic alternation in Greek is that of the grades and zero as seen in the
forms of the verb root :
This type is most frequently seen, however, in a variety in which the or the forms a diphthong in
combination with a semivowel ( /y or ), with a liquid ( or ), or with a nasal ( or ). In such
roots we find the and grades as diphthongs:
1.
2.
3. y
4. y
5. = =
6. y
(b) The zero-grade in such instances appears as the vocalic form of the semi-vowel ( or ), or as the
common vocalic form of the liquid ( or ) or nasal ( or ; these are the forms taken by both
vocalic and vocalic before a vowel or a consonant respectively). Thus the series above is completed
with corresponding zero-grade forms:
1.
2.
3. y
4. y
5. = =
6. y
12. Vowel Gradation: The type long-vowel/short-vowel: A somewhat less common but no less important second
type of vocalic alternation is that wherein a long vowel ( or ) alternates with its corresponding short
vowel ( or ):
1. = =
2.
3.
A COMPENDIUM OF ANCIENT GREEK PHONOLOGY 69
13. Vowel Gradation in Disyllabic Roots: Certain Greek roots, especially those with a liquid or a nasal as the
second consonant, seem to undergo such changes as to indicate vocalic alternation both before and after the
second consonant. The alternation of the vowel in the first syllable is of the type ; that of the vowel in the
second syllable is of the type long-vowel/short-vowel. This pattern of alternation is further complicated,
however, by two facts: (1) a regularly appears in the zero-grade of a syllable ending in a liquid or a nasal; (2)
the short-vowel grade of the second syllable appears to represent an original Indo-European shewa ( ). In
Greek this shewa disappears before a vowel or otherwise is represented by the short vowel ( , or )
corresponding to the long-vowel grade ( or ).
+ *
-grade in the 1st syllable, short-vowel grade in the 2nd
* = * =
-grade in the 1st syllable, short-vowel grade in the 2nd
* = *- =
zero-grade in the 1st syllable, short-vowel grade in the 2nd
+ *
-grade in the 1st syllable, short-vowel grade in the 2nd
* =
-grade in the 1st syllable, short-vowel grade in the 2nd
* =
zero-grade in the 1st syllable, short-vowel grade in the 2nd
= =
*- =
zero-grade in the 1st syllable, long-vowel grade in the 2nd
+ *
zero-grade in the 1st syllable, short-vowel grade in the 2nd
*- =
zero-grade in the 1st syllable, long-vowel grade in the 2nd
4. Labio- gw - gwh - kw -
velar
5. Sibilant z s
2. The Indo-European spirants w and y do not survive in the Attic-Ionic dialect; but they are represented in
the reconstruction of the history of word-forms by or and y respectively. actually does appear in some
early inscriptions.
3. The sonant m appears in Greek either as after a vowel or as after a consonant. The sonant n vocalizes
as . The sonants and vocalize in Greek as or and or respectively:
I-E *dekm = Latin decem = Greek
I-E *n- = Latin in- = English un- = Greek
4. The ancient Greek was a double consonant originally zd (cf. < ), in Attic dz.
5. Ancient Greek , and were pronounced as English linger, sink, and inkhorn.
15. Consonants: Attic Combinations (read the following table like that in §8 above:
(a) The general principle of assimilation of stops is that the preceding stop is assimilated to the order of the
second stop. Thus:
> ( becomes b before d)
> ( becomes before )
> ( becomes before )
> ( becomes before
(b) The combinations of stops with indicated on the table above are seen most commonly in the formation of
future and first-aorist stems ( ), in the formation of third-declension nominative
singular and dative plural (e.g. > > >
> , and in the formation of the perfect middle-passive second singular (e.g.
> ). Note that makes voiced stops ( ) lose their vocalization (they becomes ) and
makes aspirates ( ) lose their aspiration (they also become ). Thus becomes =
and becomes = ; becomes = and
becomes = . All dental stops ( ) assimilate to and are absorbed into
it. Thus: becomes , becomes , and becomes .
(c) The combinations of stops with , and are particularly significant in forms of the middle/passive
indicative, infinitive, and participle. Thus:
+ + +
(d) The combinations of stops with are particularly significant in forms of the aorist passive. Thus:
becomes
becomes
A COMPENDIUM OF ANCIENT GREEK PHONOLOGY 71
(a) Greek represent Indo-European bh dh gh; but these voiced Indo-European aspirates are
unvoiced in Greek. In course of time they degenerated into the sounds of f and th (as in English thin)
ch (as in German ich). They were pronounced thus already in the Koinê.
(b) Final unvoiced stops ( ) will assimilate to an aspirated vowel at the beginning of the following word.
becomes
becomes
becomes
(c) Dissimilation of aspirates: a syllable bounded by two aspirates loses aspiration of one of the stops,
usually the first. Thus:
1. > > (but note that in the future tense, is de-aspirated when combining with ;
hence, aspiration re-appears at the beginning of the syllable: > > = ).
2. >
3. > (but note that in the comparative degree, aspiration is lost when y becomes
; hence aspiration reappears at the beginning of the syllable).
4. The noun root appears as except in the nominative singular and the dative plural
, where is de-aspirated in combination with .
Then, after loss of the velar appendage (w), the resultant gutturals ( ) follow the pattern of
transformations of guttural + y. Thus:
Indo-European kwy --> Greek y --> Attic or Ionic
Indo-European ghwy --> Greek y --> Attic or Ionic
while
Indo-European gwy --> Greek y -->
okwye > y
>
lnghwy*on >
>
gwy*en > y
>
(c) Intervocalic , like initial , weakened to an aspirate, then evanesced, leaving a hiatus between the
vowels, which Attic dialect then closed by contraction of vowels:
1. > h > > ;
2. --> h --> --> .
(d) before an unvoiced stop remains intact. Thus, while the e-grade of the root w shows loss of and
aspiration in , the zero-grade of the same root w shows the intact in the aorist infinitive
. Similarly the root segh/sgh shows present indicative first singular (from , but with
dissimilation of aspirates, cf. §17c above), aorist infinitive .
(e) before a voiced stop: is vocalized to :
1. IE osdo- --> Greek (articulated ozdos)
2. --> (articulated Athenazde)
(f) between a liquid or nasal and a vowel evanesces, and the preceding vowel is then lengthened
compensatorily (cf. §10 above):
1. >
2. --> -->
3. -->
4. -->
(g) Double tends to simplify. Thus becomes . In the second person singular of
first simplified to ; when this intervocalic was lost, the resultant contraction, ,
became the historical Attic equivalent of the Homeric .
(h) following stops: see §16b above.
(e) Yod between voiced dental or guttural stop and vowel: y or y -->
y >
y >
(f) Yod after a labial stop becomes to which the preceding consonant is assimilated:
y >
y >
y >
(g) Yod between liquid or nasal and a vowel:
1. l doubles: >
>
2. and effect a metathesis of the consonantal yod to the second element of a diphthong with the
preceding vowel:
y >
y >
y >
(h) Yod between and a vowel: is lost, an -diphthong results:
y >
y >
(i) Yod between and a vowel: ultimately both are lost:
y > > >
y > > >