hiwiki:IPA for Greek
नेविगेशन पर जाएँ
खोज पर जाएँ
The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents Ancient Greek and Modern Greek pronunciations in Wikipedia articles. Today, pronunciation of Ancient Greek is mostly based on Erasmian pronunciation. However, native Greek speakers use Modern Greek pronunciations for Ancient Greek words and phrases.
See Ancient Greek phonology and Modern Greek phonology for a more thorough look at the sounds of these languages.
Notes
External links
- ↑ अ आ इ ई उ ऊ साँचा:lang represent palatal [ʝ c ç ɲɟ ɲç] only before the front vowels [i] and [e]. The velar and palatal series series are sometimes analyzed as allophones of a single dorsal series.
- ↑ Also may have been /zd/.
- ↑ अ आ [ʎ] and [ɲ] are usually analysed as clusters of /li/ and /ni/ respectively, and are also spelled accordingly in Greek orthography. Palatalized pronunciation presupposes the presence of yet another vowel after the palatalized consonant and its following /i/. If there is no subsequent second vowel, palatalization does not occur.
- ↑ May be a tap [ɾ] intervocalically.
- ↑ May have been /rʰ/.
- ↑ साँचा:lang represents [z] before [b v m r ɣ] eg: साँचा:lang [ˈzminos]
- ↑ अ आ इ ई उ ऊ ए ऐ साँचा:lang usually represent [ŋg~ɲɟ mb nd] when found in the middle of a Greek word, [g~ɟ b d] when found in any foreign word or in the beginning of the a Greek one. eg: साँचा:lang [amˈbe̞li], μπαμπάς [baˈbas]
- ↑ The large number of mergers into Modern Greek /i/ is called Iotacism.
- ↑ Letters normally representing /i/ can also indicate a palatal pronunciation of dorsal consonants when appearing before other vowels: i.e instead of velar [ɣ k x ɡ], palatal [ʝ c ç ɟ] occur (eg: साँचा:lang [ʝaˈʝa], साँचा:lang [ˈcolas], साँचा:lang [ˈçoni], साँचा:lang [maˈɟa]. A similar process has a palatal fricative follow other consonants; [ʝ] follows voiced consonants [v b d ð z r] (eg: साँचा:lang [ˈce̞rʝa], साँचा:lang [varˈʝe̞me̞]) and [ç] follows voiceless consonants [f p θ t s t͡s] (eg: साँचा:lang [karfˈça], साँचा:lang [pços], साँचा:lang [re̞ˈviθça]). Similarly [ɲ] follows [m] under similar situations (eg: साँचा:lang [mɲa], साँचा:lang [kalaˈmɲa]
- ↑ When following a vowel, साँचा:lang represents a pronunciation with [f] before साँचा:lang, and a pronunciation with [v] elsewhere.