difference between modern and ancient greek

Here you can discuss all things Ancient Greek. Use this board to ask questions about grammar, discuss learning strategies, get help with a difficult passage of Greek, and more.
Post Reply
svaens
Textkit Neophyte
Posts: 29
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 10:46 am
Location: Germany
Contact:

difference between modern and ancient greek

Post by svaens »

Hi guys,

I'm just starting to look into learning Greek, with particular interest in the comprehension of the writings of the ancient Greeks.

Question: Ignoring pronunciation, how different is ancient or classical Greek, to that which is written in modern Greece today?

Any short example would also be appreciated!

Thanks for all replies!

User avatar
IreneY
Textkit Zealot
Posts: 800
Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2006 8:27 am
Location: U.S.A (not American though)
Contact:

Post by IreneY »

Hmmm, I think we must make a sticky on this matter. :)

Well, do you know any Greek of whatever era at all? That would help with explaining no end.

In simple terms, modern Greek is quite more analytical and simplified (grammatically speaking obviously).
Things such as the dative case or the optative mood are no longer used (with the exception of fixed expressions and suchlike) and others such as the participle are used much less often and have fewer forms.

The vocabulary is to a large extend the same. The main changes there (except the additions obviously) consist mainly of the forms when some simplification has occured (such as ανή? -> άνδ?ας/άντ?ας, πόλις -> πόλη, ίστημη -> στέκω, δείκνυμι -> δείχνω) and some (very) few, though striking changes of meaning (I'll forgo my favourite example and go for "empathy" that, in modern Greek, means "bias", "spite", "prejudice") .

After '82 we have also done away with breathing marks and all but one stress/accent mark.

The syntactical "logic" of the language however has not really changed all that much.

The knowledge of one helps greatly with learning the other but there are distinct differences which mean that even if you know one perfectly you'll need some (at least) studying of the other to be able to use it. Obviously someone whose native language is not Greek will be able to give you more details into the matter.

I don't know if you are looking for more details into the matter but we'll be glad to provide some :) .

svaens
Textkit Neophyte
Posts: 29
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 10:46 am
Location: Germany
Contact:

So learn Modern Greek first?

Post by svaens »

Thanks for your reply, IreneY!

I of course asked this question (which must be quite popularly asked?) not simply out of curiosity, but as beginning for myself in understanding just where I should begin in my quest to learn classical Greek.

So it almost sounds like, if you can read and speak and understand modern Greek, you should be able to 'get the gist' of an old classical text?

I myself am interested in both Latin and Greek, and I have already embarked on my journey with Latin (and find it quite enjoyable) I have not yet actively begun my journey with Greek, beyond starting to collect some resources, and post on this forum.

With Latin, to my knowledge, there seem to be fewer changes in the language we all call Latin. There were some minor changes I've been made aware of dating to around the reign of Augustus, however not so many. And that is about all the 'classical Latin' readers need to be aware of, unless you are trying to translate some older 'texts' , of which there aren't as many.

In Latin, there are also two main ways to pronounce; according to ecclesiastic methods, and the classical, as one would learn at school (i think). However, this is independent from any actual change in the language itself.

Then of course there are the many derivative languages of Latin, the romance languages; French, Spanish, Italian etc.

However, my intention in learning Latin was, besides the fun of doing so, to be able to read classical Latin texts, to be able read the words of Caesar, to be able to read some of the words one finds on many old ruins next time I visit the roman forum ;) And while I don't exclude myself from learning a 'romance language' with which I can actually talk to a large population of people who live today (in fact, i'm learning spanish on the side), that is not my purpose in learning 'Latin'.

Question:

Here are my questions after a much to long winded introduction:

In my quest to learn some classical Greek, which is in order to read and understand classical texts such as those written by Socrates (for example):

1. would it be advisable to learn modern Greek first?

2. Having then learned and become reasonably proficient in modern Greek would the classical texts already be comprehensible?

3. If a time machine were to be a scientific fact, and we were to beam Socrates to the present time, would HE be able to understand the written modern Greek language?

4. Can anyone suggest some good beginning texts?
I have heard these JACT books are good?


Thanks and kind regards to all you friendly readers out there!

Swth\r
Textkit Fan
Posts: 276
Joined: Thu Jan 17, 2008 6:51 pm
Location: Greece

Re: So learn Modern Greek first?

Post by Swth\r »

svaens wrote: Question:

Here are my questions after a much to long winded introduction:

In my quest to learn some classical Greek, which is in order to read and understand classical texts such as those written by Socrates (for example):

1. would it be advisable to learn modern Greek first?

2. Having then learned and become reasonably proficient in modern Greek would the classical texts already be comprehensible?

3. If a time machine were to be a scientific fact, and we were to beam Socrates to the present time, would HE be able to understand the written modern Greek language?

4. Can anyone suggest some good beginning texts?
I have heard these JACT books are good?


Thanks and kind regards to all you friendly readers out there!
Socrates has written himself nothing. Everything we know about his life and ideas comes from Plato, Xenophon, Aristofanes, and "minor" sources.

Now as for your questions... As both a native speaker of modern Greek and teacher of ancient Greek, I have the following answers for you:

1. Not at all. It would be nice to learn another language, but not for the purpose you already have in mind...

2. Not at all (again, and unfortunately!:cry:). The pronunciation is very different in most situations, even though many words are spelled exactly the same. Also, some words have different meaning in ancient and in modern Greek. Further, declination and syntax are very different. It happens for me to be a teacher of ancient Greek language to young students in Greek high school (Gymnasium-Lyceum). I have to inform you that my task is very, very difficult!

3. Again unfortunately no :cry:. Some words perhaps. Even written communication would be a major problem, because in his time writing was taking place only in capitals, without spaces between words, so syllable cutting, no aspiration or accenting marks... (All those things are later innovations, from Hellenistic to medieval period).

4. Sorry, not me :oops: :(

Have a good start, at whatever you decide to do!

Cheers, and any time available to give you any other relative information!

User avatar
IreneY
Textkit Zealot
Posts: 800
Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2006 8:27 am
Location: U.S.A (not American though)
Contact:

Post by IreneY »

Hello svaens :)

First of all, the journey is always easier from the more coplex to the more simplified, so if you want to learn both ancient Greek and modern start with the older :)

The second question is actually where I really differ from Swthr. If you were really proficient in modern Greek, you would need to study ancient Greek for a while as I said before but it would help you understand a lot of things. Since up to the recent past I was a teacher myself, the main problem Greek kids have (apart from lack of interest) is that they don't know modern Greek well enough if you ask me (which you haven't and you are probably not interested in).

As for Socrates: Apart from the technical stuff (learn about lower case and whatnot) I think he'd need no more than a few pointers before he'd been able to get the gist of the texts. Of course, for Socrates to be able to really understand modern Greek he'd need a few months to larn the new words that have been incorporated in our vocabulary and the differences in grammar.

In a nutshell, I do believe that you should start with ancient Greek. Now if only we could get mingshey to answer in this thread!

svaens
Textkit Neophyte
Posts: 29
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 10:46 am
Location: Germany
Contact:

Post by svaens »

Hey! Thanks both for your replies!

I think then I probably will start looking into ancient Greek.
Gee, it is too bad there seems to be no great natural learning book like 'Lingua Latina' is for Latin. I have read in another thread here that there is one similar, but only the Italian version, and it sounds like there seems to be enough Italian content (translations etc) to make it necessary to know Italian, or have a good book handy. And there's only so many dictionaries one can carry around!!
But I guess that is what I'm looking for. An Ancient Greek equivalent to 'Lingua Latina'.

IreneY, Just out of curiosity, just what would you expect 'mingshey' to contribute to this thread?

User avatar
IreneY
Textkit Zealot
Posts: 800
Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2006 8:27 am
Location: U.S.A (not American though)
Contact:

Post by IreneY »

Mingshey studied ancient Greek and then moved on to modern. He is not a native speaker of Greek so his take on the matter is quite interesting (to me at least :) )

svaens
Textkit Neophyte
Posts: 29
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 10:46 am
Location: Germany
Contact:

Post by svaens »

ahhh, so exactly what I plan to attempt. Good! Then he/she would be the perfect person to hear from! Seconded!

Swth\r
Textkit Fan
Posts: 276
Joined: Thu Jan 17, 2008 6:51 pm
Location: Greece

Post by Swth\r »



User avatar
IreneY
Textkit Zealot
Posts: 800
Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2006 8:27 am
Location: U.S.A (not American though)
Contact:

Post by IreneY »

Swthr (this keyboard is Korean and I swear they have hidden away the right slash!) that is not what I mean really. I am not talking about grammatical rules and whatnot.
I am talking about very poor language skills, or in other words, limited vocabulary, the most basic syntactical forms in speech, problematic reading comprehension as evidenced by text analysis/summary etc etc

As I have said before, ancient Greek is a more complicated form of the Greek language. When most of the students' skills in modern Greek are such that allow them to communicate with each others for everyday means and only get the gist of anything more complex, well, then these students are bound to have trouble understanding ancient Greek.
Of course the way many teach ancient Greek by putting aside modern Greek doesn't help either, and there are other issues of course (I mentioned one I find major already: lack of interest in studying modern or ancient Greek).

Anyway, this is, of course, too general and everything but I think we should better continue this discussion by PMs since I am sure the rest are not interested in all this and we are hijacking svaens' thread.

svaens
Textkit Neophyte
Posts: 29
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 10:46 am
Location: Germany
Contact:

Post by svaens »

I am, as always, happy to sit back and listen to (read) healthy debate ;)

Swth\r
Textkit Fan
Posts: 276
Joined: Thu Jan 17, 2008 6:51 pm
Location: Greece

Post by Swth\r »

IreneY,
then it seems that basically we agree here...

My friend svaens, that was my last reply (to IreneY)... Sorry for interruption.

mingshey
Textkit Zealot
Posts: 1338
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2003 6:38 am
Location: Seoul
Contact:

Post by mingshey »

IreneY wrote:Swthr (this keyboard is Korean and I swear they have hidden away the right slash!)
Korean keyboard uses the back-slash for the Korean currency unit(Won) symbol which looks like a capital W with a dash over it. It's the same key with the vertical bar(|). How come are you using a Korean keyboard? Anyway, too bad for you. It's annoying when dealing with windows file paths and TeX commands, etc.

User avatar
IreneY
Textkit Zealot
Posts: 800
Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2006 8:27 am
Location: U.S.A (not American though)
Contact:

Post by IreneY »

Thanks! My husband speaks Korean and lived there for a while and he brought it back with him since western keyboards are not good for typing in Korean (or Chinese I suppose).

By the way what about what we're discussing here? What's your take?

PeterD
Textkit Enthusiast
Posts: 591
Joined: Sat Nov 15, 2003 6:54 pm
Location: Montreal, Canada

Post by PeterD »

IreneY wrote:Since up to the recent past I was a teacher myself, the main problem Greek kids have (apart from lack of interest) is that they don't know modern Greek well enough if you ask me (which you haven't and you are probably not interested in).
You nailed it, Irene. As a Canadian of Greek heritage, I have visited Greece numerous times, and I have this to say about today's Greeks (of Greece): They're stupid. They know d-ck. Sorry, Irene, but Greeks like yourself are in the minority. Pity.

User avatar
IreneY
Textkit Zealot
Posts: 800
Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2006 8:27 am
Location: U.S.A (not American though)
Contact:

Post by IreneY »

(Further hijacking but...)
Swth\r too I presume (and any other Greek members) ? And at least my family and friends are, I hope, part of this minority? :wink:

Swth\r
Textkit Fan
Posts: 276
Joined: Thu Jan 17, 2008 6:51 pm
Location: Greece

Post by Swth\r »

PeterD wrote:You nailed it, Irene. As a Canadian of Greek heritage, I have visited Greece numerous times, and I have this to say about today's Greeks (of Greece): They're stupid. They know d-ck. Sorry, Irene, but Greeks like yourself are in the minority. Pity.
Even though I should feel insulted by your opinion, I will say that some times I say exactly the same (or even worse things) by the time I have returned in Greece from a trip to other countries, especially Western Europe... 8)

But I think you shoot wide of the mark when you accuse ALL us Greeks for a situation established in Greece because of a part of us (either minority or majority)... And may I ask you, have you reached this conclusion by having social contacts with specific Greek persons, or just by judging and seeing it from the angle of Modern Greek civilization (:lol:) as a whole?
Dives qui sapiens est...

mingshey
Textkit Zealot
Posts: 1338
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2003 6:38 am
Location: Seoul
Contact:

Post by mingshey »

IreneY wrote: By the way what about what we're discussing here? What's your take?
Well, I didn't get into Ancient Greek deep enough. And I have only begun to learn Modern Greek. I didn't get the glimpse of the grammar of it yet. So I'm not in a good position to compare the two dialects. I just hoped, by learning the living dialect I could get in touch with many roots and stems of the Greek vocabulary which changed little throughout the evolution of the language. Then it could help me back to acquire the ancient vocab, too.

Well, the more I try to say what I felt while learning the two dialects, I feel I'm going to say what I don't really know much. I'd rather recommend just learning both; one at a time, though. And look into them yourself. Well, anyway, it's fun to taste both of them. 8)

svaens
Textkit Neophyte
Posts: 29
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 10:46 am
Location: Germany
Contact:

Post by svaens »

Thank you mingshey

Post Reply