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Pontic Greek

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Pontic Greek is an endangered Indo-European language spoken by about 324,000 people worldwide. Although it is mainly spoken in Northern Greece, it is also spoken in Turkey, Russia, Armenia, and by the Pontic diaspora. The language was brought to Greece in the 1920s after the expulsion of the Pontic from their homeland during the 1923 population exchange. Pontic Greek is often considered a dialect of standard Greek, although reportedly, the speakers of each do not understand each other. [1] It is primarily written in the Greek script.

References

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  1. Bortone, P. (2009). Greek with no models, history or standard: Muslim Pontic Greek. Standard languages and language standards: Greek, past and present, 67-89.
  2. Georgakopoulou, A., & Silk, M. S. (Eds.). (2009). Standard languages and language standards: Greek, past and present (Vol. 12). Ashgate Publishing, Ltd..
  3. Kaltsa, M., & Sitaridou, I. (2010). Topicalisation in Pontic Greek. Research on Greek Dialects: Institutions and Projects, 262.
  4. MACKRIDGE, P. (1991). The Pontic Dialect: A Corrupt Version of Ancient Greek?. Journal Of Refugee Studies, 4(4), 335.
  5. Mariou, E. (2017). ‘My language, my mother tongue’: competing language ideologies and linguistic diversity among speakers of standard and non-standard varieties. International Journal Of Bilingual Education & Bilingualism, 20(1), 20-33. doi:10.1080/13670050.2015.1036835
  6. Mark, J. (2002). Review article:Aspects of Pontic grammar. Journal Of Greek Linguistics, 3(1), 203.
  7. Özkan, H. (2013). The Pontic Greek spoken by Muslims in the villages of Beşköy in the province of present-day Trabzon. Byzantine & Modern Greek Studies, 37(1), 130. doi:10.1179/0307013112Z.00000000023
  8. P. (n.d.). Development of the Pontic Greek Dialect. Retrieved March 10, 2017, from http://pontosworld.com/index.php/dialect/overview/282-development-of-the-pontic-greek-dialect-3
  9. Pontic. (n.d.). Retrieved March 10, 2017, from https://www.ethnologue.com/language/pnt
  10. Resource: iso639-3/pnt. (n.d.). Retrieved March 10, 2017, from http://www.lexvo.org/page/iso639-3/pnt
  1. ^ "Pontic". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2017-03-10.