Vowels Long a Proto-Greek long
ā → Attic long
ē, but
ā after
e, i, r. ⁓ Ionic
ē in all positions. ⁓ Doric and Aeolic
ā in all positions. • Proto-Greek and Doric
mātēr → Attic
mētēr "mother" • Attic
chōrā ⁓ Ionic
chōrē "place", "country" However, Proto-Greek
ā → Attic
ē after
w (
digamma),
deleted by the Classical period. • Proto-Greek
korwā → early Attic–Ionic
*korwē → Attic
korē (Ionic
kourē)
Short a Proto-Greek
ă → Attic
ĕ. ⁓ Doric:
ă remains. • Doric
Artamis ⁓ Attic
Artemis Sonorant clusters Compensatory lengthening of vowel before cluster of sonorant (
r,
l,
n,
m,
w, sometimes
y) and
s, after deletion of
s. ⁓ some Aeolic: compensatory lengthening of sonorant. :
PIE VsR or
VRs → Attic–Ionic–Doric–Boeotian
VVR. :
VsR or
VRs → Lesbian–Thessalian
VRR. • Proto-Indo-European
*es-mi (athematic verb) → Attic–Ionic
ēmi (εἰμί) ⁓ Lesbian–Thessalian
emmi "I am"
Upsilon Proto-Greek and other dialects' (English
food) became Attic (pronounced as German
ü, French
u) and represented by
y in Latin transliteration of Greek names. • Boeotian k
ourios ⁓ Attic
kyrios "lord" In the
diphthongs
eu and
au, upsilon continued to be pronounced .
Contraction Attic contracts more than Ionic does.
a +
e → long
ā. •
nika-e →
nikā "conquer (thou)!"
e +
e → ē (written
ει:
spurious diphthong). • PIE → Proto-Greek
trees → Attic
trēs = (τρεῖς), "three"
e +
o →
ō (written ου: spurious diphthong). • early
*genes-os → Ionic
geneos → Attic
genous "of a kind" (genitive singular: Latin
generis, with
r from
rhotacism)
Vowel shortening Attic
ē (from
ē-grade of
ablaut or Proto-Greek
ā) is sometimes shortened to
e: • when it is followed by a short vowel, with lengthening of the short vowel (
quantitative metathesis):
ēo →
eō • when it is followed by a long vowel:
ēō →
eō • when it is followed by
u and
s:
ēus →
eus (
Osthoff's law): •
basilēos →
basileōs "of a king" (genitive singular) •
basilēōn →
basileōn (genitive plural) •
basilēusi →
basileusi (dative plural)
Hyphaeresis Attic deletes one of two vowels in a row, called
hyphaeresis (). • Homeric
boē-tho-os → Attic
boēthos "running to a cry", "helper in battle"
Consonants Palatalization PIE
*ky or
*chy → Proto-Greek
ts (
palatalization) → Attic and Euboean Ionic
tt — Cycladean/Anatolian Ionic and Koine
ss. • Proto-Greek
*glōkh-ya → Attic
glōtta — East Ionic
glōssa "tongue" Sometimes, Proto-Greek *ty and *tw → Attic and Euboean Ionic
tt — Cycladean/Anatolian Ionic and Koine
ss. • PIE → Attic
tettares — East Ionic
tesseres, "four" (Latin
quattuor) Proto-Greek and Doric
t before
i or
y → Attic–Ionic
s (palatalization). • Doric
ti-the-nti → Attic
tithēsi = (τίθει
σι) "he places" (
compensatory lengthening of
e →
ē =
spurious diphthong (ει))
Shortening of ss Doric, Aeolian, early Attic–Ionic
ss → Classical Attic
s. • PIE → Homeric (),
messos ("palatalization") → Attic (),
mesos ("middle") • Homeric () → Attic (), "I performed (a ceremony)" • Proto-Greek → Homeric () → Attic (), "by foot" • Proto-Greek → dialectal () → Attic ()
Loss of w Proto-Greek
w (
digamma) was lost in Attic before historical times. • Proto-Greek
korwā → Attic
korē, "girl"
Retention of h Attic retained Proto-Greek
h- (from
debuccalization of Proto-Indo-European initial
s- or
y-), but some other dialects lost it (
psilosis, "stripping", "deaspiration"). • Proto-Indo-European
*si-sta-mes → Attic
histamen — Cretan
istamen, "we stand"
Movable n Attic–Ionic places an
n (
movable nu) at the end of some words that would ordinarily end in a vowel, if the next word starts with a vowel, to prevent
hiatus (two vowels in a row). The movable nu can also be used to turn what would be a short syllable into a
long syllable for use in
meter. •
pāsin élegon, "they spoke to everyone", vs.
pāsi legousi •
pāsi(n), dative plural of "all" •
legousi(n), "they speak" (third person plural, present indicative active) •
elege(n), "he was speaking" (third person singular, imperfect indicative active) •
titheisi(n), "he places", "makes" (third person singular, present indicative active: athematic verb)
Rr instead of rs. Attic and Euboean Ionic use rr in words, when Cycladean and Anatolian Ionic use rs: • Attic (χερρόνησος) → East Ionic (χερσόνησος), "peninsula" • Attic (ἄρρην) → East Ionic (ἄρσην), "male" • Attic (θάρρος) → East Ionic (θάρσος), "courage"
Attic replaces the Ionic -σσ with -ττ Attic and Euboean Ionic use tt, while Cycladean and Anatolian Ionic use ss: • Attic (γλῶττα) → East Ionic (γλῶσσα), "tongue" • Attic (πράττειν) → East Ionic (πράσσειν), "to do, to act" • Attic (θάλαττα) → East Ionic (θάλασσα), "sea" ==Morphology==