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I. Ancient Greek dialects A. Dialect and standard language [German version] Greek is attested in

in Brill's New Pauly Online
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Modern Greek dialects Journal of Greek Linguistics 4 ( 2003 ), 45 – 64. issn 1566 – 5844 / e-issn 1569 – 9846 © John Benjamins Publishing Company <TARGET "tru" DOCINFO AUTHOR "Peter Trudgill"TITLE "Modern Greek dialects"SUBJECT "JGL, Volume 4"KEYWORDS "Modern Greek dialects, dialectology

Open Access
In: Journal of Greek Linguistics
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The current issue contains a selection of the papers presented at the workshop on the morphosyntax of Modern Greek dialects, which was organized by Arhonto Terzi and myself in September 2015 and was hosted within the 12th International Conference of Greek Linguistics ( ICGL  12) at the Freie

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In: Journal of Greek Linguistics

literary languages; or poor attestation, which is likely the case for many Greek dialects. Such is the major pitfall of taxon selection in phylogenetic analysis of language: the need to impose granularity on a situation which is anything but discrete, or inappropriate granularity imposed by the vagaries of

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In: Indo-European Linguistics

Greek dialects in Asia Minor Journal of Greek Linguistics 2 ( 2001 ), 75 – 117. issn 1566 – 5844 / e-issn 1569 – 9846 © John Benjamins Publishing Company <TARGET "koo" DOCINFO AUTHOR "Jan G. Kooij and Anthi Revithiadou" TITLE "Greek dialects in Asia Minor" SUBJECT "JGL, Volume 2" KEYWORDS

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In: Journal of Greek Linguistics
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Journal of Greek Linguistics 5 (2004), 3–26 . issn 1566–5844 / e-issn 1569–9856 © John Benjamins Publishing Company Animacy, definiteness, and case in Cappadocian and other Asia Minor Greek dialects* Mark Janse Ghent University and Roosevelt Academy, Middelburg This article discusses the

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In: Journal of Greek Linguistics
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Journal of Greek Linguistics 7 (2006), 2–59 . issn 1566–5844 / e-issn 1569–9856 © John Benjamins Publishing Company State-of-the-art Review Article Syntactic and morphosyntactic phenomena in Modern Greek dialects The state of the art* Angela Ralli University of Patras In this paper I give an

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In: Journal of Greek Linguistics
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purposes in the nineteenth century. Contact phenomena emerge in all Modern Greek dialects, the origin of which is usually considered to be the Hellenistic Koine, 3 and are observed on multiple linguistic levels – lexical, grammatical, phonological, semantic – and in heterogeneous communicative contexts

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In: Journal of Language Contact
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-317, uses numerous West Greek dialectal inscriptions from the 3rd and 2nd century B.C. for a study of “the problem of geographical and morpholexical diffusion of the o-stem dative plural of -οις to the athematic nouns (and ι- and ευ-stems)”. E. Bettolini, AEVUM 57 (1983) 51-57, reconsiders the literary

In: Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum Online

⇐ PreviousBrowse ⇑Next ⇒ Entry A.C.Cassio in Taranto - - (cf. SEG 52 962), studies the Greek dialect of Tarentum, with frequent reference to inscriptions, inter alia SEG 19 620 (C. 454/455, on the names ⊦ιστιήιος and Σάττων); XXX 1220 (IGR I 467; CIL I2 1696; C. 464); XXXVII 816 (C. 450, on the

In: Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum Online