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  2. Greek alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_alphabet

    In both Ancient and Modern Greek, the letters of the Greek alphabet have fairly stable and consistent symbol-to-sound mappings, making pronunciation of words largely predictable. Ancient Greek spelling was generally near-phonemic. For a number of letters, sound values differ considerably between Ancient and Modern Greek, because their ...

  3. Greek alphabet | History, Definition, & Facts | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/Greek-alphabet

    Greek alphabet, writing system developed in Greece about 1000 BCE that became the ancestor of all modern European alphabets. Derived from the North Semitic alphabet, the Greek alphabet was modified to make it more efficient and accurate for writing a non-Semitic language.

  4. Archaic Greek alphabets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaic_Greek_alphabets

    Many local variants of the Greek alphabet were employed in ancient Greece during the archaic and early classical periods, until around 400 BC, when they were replaced by the classical 24-letter alphabet that is the standard today.

  5. Greek Alphabet - World History Encyclopedia

    www.worldhistory.org/Greek_Alp

    The Greek alphabet was invented c. 8th century BCE. Where did the Greek alphabet come from? The Greek alphabet was derived from the Phoenician script of 22 characters without vowels. The Greek alphabet added vowels and two letters bringing the script up to 24 letters. Why is it called an "alphabet"?

  6. History of the Greek alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Greek_alphabet

    Dedication in Boeotian alphabet. Black-glaze Boeotian kantharos, 450–425 BC. The history of the Greek alphabet starts with the adoption of Phoenician letter forms in the 9th–8th centuries BC during early Archaic Greece and continues to the present day.

  7. Greek Alphabet | How Many Letters, Their Order ... - HistoryExtra

    www.historyextra.com/period/ancient-greece/ancient-greek-alphabet-letters...

    How many letters were there in the ancient Greek alphabet? Though there were several local variations of the alphabet in classical Greece, it was the Ionic alphabet that was eventually adopted by Athens and became dominant across the Greek-speaking world. This ancient Greek alphabet has 24 letters.

  8. Alphabet - Greek, Phoenician, Letters | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/alphabet-writing/Greek-alphabet

    Alphabet - Greek, Phoenician, Letters: The Greek alphabet derived from the North Semitic script in the 8th century bce. The direction of writing in the oldest Greek inscriptions—as in the Semitic scripts—is from right to left, a style that was superseded by the boustrophedon (meaning, in Greek, “as the ox draws the plow”), in which ...

  9. Ancient Greek/Alphabet - Wikibooks, open books for an open world

    en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek/Alphabet

    Ancient Greek was a language that distinguished between long and short syllables. Recall that the letters omicron and epsilon always denote short vowels for the purposes of accentuation (length can be determined differently for the sake of meter).

  10. Greek Language and Linguistics: Alphabet

    www.greek-language.com/Alphabet.html

    The letters in the Greek alphabet presented below are used for printed Ancient Greek texts. The earliest Greek texts that have survived were written with a radically different script called Linear B.

  11. Greek language - Alphabet, Dialects, Origins | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/topic/Greek-language/The-Greek-alphabet

    Ancient Greek History and development. From the end of the 4th century bce onward, in the Hellenistic period, Greek gradually obtained a high degree of unity throughout the area it covered (see Koine).