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Hellenic languages: Difference between revisions

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|4=[[Pamphylian Greek|Pamphylian]] (extinct; related to Arcado-Cypriot)
|4=[[Pamphylian Greek|Pamphylian]] (extinct; related to Arcado-Cypriot)
|5=[[Mycenaean Greek language|Mycenaean]] (extinct)
|5=[[Mycenaean Greek language|Mycenaean]] (extinct)
|label6= [[Doric Greek|NW Greek-Doric]] 
|label6= [[Doric_Greek#Northwest_Greek|NW Greek]]-[[Doric Greek|Doric]] 
|6=[[Tsakonian language|Tsakonian]] (Doric-influenced Koine variety? moribund)
|6=[[Tsakonian language|Tsakonian]] (Doric-influenced Koine variety? moribund)
}}
}}

Revision as of 20:26, 8 April 2009

Hellenic
Geographic
distribution
Greece and the eastern Mediterranean
Linguistic classificationIndo-European
  • Hellenic

The term Hellenic languages is sometimes used to refer to a branch of the Indo-European language family thought to include Greek and closely related languages. It is used mainly to describe the relationship between Greek proper and Ancient Macedonian, a barely attested extinct variety whose degree of affinity with mainstream Greek is not well known.

Among the modern descendants of ancient Greek, the moribund Tsakonian dialect is sometimes described as a language separate from Modern Greek proper, as it is frequently believed to be a descendant of the ancient Doric dialect rather than the Attic Koine, the ancestor of all other Modern Greek dialects, and because it is not readily intelligible to speakers of standard Modern Greek.(Voegelin and Voegelin 1977).

Hellenic 
 Greek 
 Ionic-Attic 

Aeolic (extinct)

Arcado-Cypriot (extinct; related to Mycenaean?)

Pamphylian (extinct; related to Arcado-Cypriot)

Mycenaean (extinct)

 NW Greek-Doric 

Tsakonian (Doric-influenced Koine variety? moribund)

? Macedonian (extinct)

See also

References