Greek Vowels

 
Letter
Greek Name  ()
English Name
common Eng.
pronunciation
alpha
ahlfuh
epsilon
epsilaun
eta
eituh
iota
aioetuh
omicron
ahmihcrahn
upsilon
uhpsilahn
omega
oemeguh
*Greek
pronunciation
uhlfuh
epseelaun
eeps-see-lone
eetuh
eeautuh
yoh-tah
aumeecraun
eepseelaun
aumeguh

*The pronunciations shown indicate how these words would be pronounced with only 5 vowels.

Grapheme - Phoneme Correspondences for ancient Greek
Latin equivalent a e i o u
Greek letters , ,,,,, ,
English examples but
clutch
bet
etch
beat, beet
each
bought
awe, awl
boot
ooze
PMF key words
pictographic monofon
up
^
el
elbow
eel
\
auk
hawk
ooze
hoop
Upper Case Gk.
A      E  I H UOWOU


 

This analysis of ancient Greek may be a little controversial but it is not new.  Notice that even in the beginning there was ambiguity as to the sound associated with upsilon (ipsilon).  There is a similar ambiguity with respect to omicron (umicron) and omega (awmeguh). 

Perhaps the most controversial aspect of this analysis is the absense of  /ah/ for *alpha. In most romance languages there is a stressed A /ah/ and an unstressed A /uh/ (shwa) as in the Portuguese pronunciation of alpha and cama  [ /ahl-fuh/ and /cah-muh/ ]  The uh sound is absent from Spanish: cama = cahmah.

Like English, Greek continues to be spelled as it was pronounced in ancient times.  This adds to the loss of alphabetic regularity and compounds the ambiguity of the relationship between symbol and sound.

In English, the letter A is commonly associated with the /uh/ sound as in Greek.  However, children are taught that it corresponds to /ae/ and /ei/ (the sounds in ax and ape).  Words such as about and sofa are initially ignored or taught as sight words.
 

A = ah:  I = ee, O = awe

A key to understanding the sounds associated with the vowel letters in the Romance languages (and in IPA, the phonetic alphabet used in many dictionaries) is recognizing that the the sound of A in these notational systems for these languages is the sound English speakers usually associate with O (as in *ox) and the sound of I is the one English speakers usually associated with the sound of E (as in *he) or EE (as in *see).

With this new connection between shape and sound, it is possible to make sense of such blends as /ai/ as in *aisle *hai lai, *aikido, and * aioli; and /ei/ as in *eight, *weigh, and *they.

If A is /ah/ then /ai/ is /ah - ee/ and *ice can be spelled AIS and pronounced /ah-ees/. 
If I is /ee/, then /ei/ is /eh - ee/ and *ace can be spelled EIS and pronounced /eh-ees/.

In English, ei is more likely to be pronounced /ai/ as in *eider, *eidetic, or /ee/ as in *either.
Although, there are a few instances of consistent Latinate spelling as in *vein and *veil

Quiz on Greek Vowels
How do you pronounce the letter eta  [ H  ] in Greek, Spanish, and English?
How do you pronounce the letter iota  [ I ] in Greek, Spanish, and English?
How do you pronounce the letter upsilon  [ Y  ] in Greek, Spanish, and English?
[if a letter is associated with two sounds, list both of them]

ANSWERS
eetuh, eitah, eituh
eeawtuh, eeawtah, ai-oh-tuh
eepsilawn, eepseelawn or oopseelawn, oopsilahn or upsilahn
 


Greek Consonants

 
Letter
Greek Name 
English Name beta gamma delta zeta theta kappa lambda

 
 
 
Letter
Greek Name 
English Name mu nu ksi pi rho sigma tau phi chi psi

but as many as 20 primary sounds
 

 
Latin equivalent bh (v) gh dh z th k l m n p r
Greek letters
English examples very
vale
fuego (Sp.) the
thy
zest
zag
thin
thigh
task
kick
lead
leg
man
mt.
nut
none
step
pipe
road
pero (Sp.)

 
 
 
Latin equivalent s t ph (f) kh b d g ts dz
Greek letters ,
English examples sea
kiss
tip
but
flag
fife
loch (Sc.)
eksi 
boot
tub
dig
bad
goad
tug
sits red zone

 

and 6 secondary sounds
 

 
Latin equivalent gh' (y) k' (q) l' n' kh' g'
Greek letters ,
English examples yield que (Fr.) cavallo (Sp.) lasagna (It.) hue guerre (Fr.)

Ancient GreekThe transition from Semitic (Phoenician/Canaanite) to Greek letter forms

Commentary

Latin equivalents


The correspondence between Greek sounds and letters (or combination of letters) from the Latin alphabet is not the standard one that is used in Modern Greek through English books. This represention was chosen based on two criteria:

Categories


The consonant sounds in Greek are arranged into 6 categories:
 
  • (pertaining to the lips) 
  • Short Long
    Voiced b bh
    Unvoiced p ph
  • (pertaining to the teeth) 
  • Short Long
    Voiced d dh
    Unvoiced t th
  • (pertaining to the throat) 
  • Short Long
    Voiced g gh
    Unvoiced k kh
  • (pertaining to the palate) 
  • Short Long
    Voiced g' gh'
    Unvoiced k' kh'
  • (making a whistling sound) 
  • Short Long
    Voiced dz z
    Unvoiced ts s
  • (pertaining to the nose) 
  • Long
    Voiced m
    Unvoiced n
  • (pertaining to the tongue, lit. "wet") 
  • Short Long
    Unvoiced l r
  • (other palatal) 
  • Short Long
    Unvoiced l' n'

    This analysis of Greek sounds dating from around 400 bc influenced Bishop Wilkins (1670)


    Viewer Feedback

    Not being a Greek scholar, I can be easily mistaken about some of this. Those of you who are better schooled than I am need to point out any errors I may have made in this analysis. --SB

    The suggestion that *alpha may have been pronounced /ulfa/ could be related to the fact that the *a grapheme still retains this possible interpretation today in many languages. In Portuguese, for instance, *cama is pronounced /cuh' muh/ and *vista is pronounced /vees' tuh/. When the accent falls on the *a, however, it is usually pronounced /ah/ as in *pot. 


    The short /ah/ is virtually indistinguishable from /uh/. --Ian A.


    I was taught that there were 7 sounds; however, modern Greek does not differentiate between some of the vowel sounds. I have the tapes narrated by Spiros Zodhiates who is a Greek scholar and also a Greek by birth. This is what he says: No one knows precisely how ancient Greek was pronounced, but there is good evidence that it sounded much like Modern Greek." He goes on to say that "both courses in classical or Koine Greek are taught today with an academia pronunciation derived from Erasmus."

    In his guide to modern Greek pronunciation he gives "ee" for ee-tah, yoh-tah and eeps-ee-lone.

    I have a Greek New Testament with the Koine on one side and Modern Greek on the other side. It has not changed very much. They do not have middle voice but most of the words and sentences are the same. He thinks that Koine and Modern sounded much alike - however, I have a hard time believing that, but he may be right.

    Clyde Wilton   Email   Homepage  Internet Phone


    Vowel Shift: Front vowels moved up. i: became ai, Back vowels moved down u became au

    These pairs do not seem to be indicative of these changes. doom to deam would be in the reverse direction.

    Fall and fell don't seem to related to the vowel shift.


    gu:s gi:s heil helth
    tu:th ti:th heil helth
    man men du:m di:m
    maos mais fo:l fel
    o:ld eldr blud bli:d


    Send your comments to Steve Bett
    Comments will be edited and added to this page unless you specifically request them to be private.
    links
    u: - ways to spell
    i: - ways to spell
    e - ways to spell
    Rhyming Dictionary
    Visit these related pages on applied linguistics and rationalized spelling
    nU @lfabets for EGliSnew alphabets for English x simplifYd speliG sOsYeti
    link to the simplified spelling society, UK, Aston University
    american litRasi kWnsL link to the American Literacy Council, New York  simplifYd speliG E-list
    link to members with email
    spelling ring
     
    Links
    ECRC Home Page Ancient Greek Greek Language Resource
    Vowel Space Click & Listen English Vowels Icelandic Vowels
    Shapes: Roman/Latin Ancient Scripts Runes Punic PMF Coptic
    Alphabet Anglic Alphabet Glossary     Back to the Simplified Spelling Page

     
     

    Last modified: June, 1997, answers to quiz added February, 2000
    This page is an expanded version of two Greek language pages that can be found on the Internet (links listed above). Although based on the information provided on these Web pages, the editor accepts all responsibility for any errors and misinterpretation.


    bookhandIf you come across any other great language resource sites,  please mail me the links.

    background=bg-bpapr,   animated graphic=bookhand