Title: 10th Lesson
110th Lesson
- By Christos N. Hadjichristidis
2Todays Attractions
- ?fe??? ?????? ?? ? ?est??. ??t?? ?t? ???a??? e?,
?a? ??te ?est?? ??te ??????, µ???? se ?µ?sa? ??
t?? st?µat?? µ??. (I would thou wert cold or
hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and
neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my
mouth ) ST. JOHN'S REVELATION - 3 - Review of the Similarities Differences between
Greek and English Grammar. Put it all together! - Review on Greek language basic features
- Asking whats on the menu and ordering Greek food
and drink - Telling the time in Greek
- Asking about public transport, finding out travel
times and checking travel details - Watch a relevant movie in Greek
- Practise ordering Greek food drinks at Simply
Greek!
3(No Transcript)
4The stress-mark
- The stress mark (?) is used, in every word with
more than one syllable (with few exceptions), to
show the primary or main stressed syllable in the
word. - Some simple rules
- 1. The stress mark always falls on one of the
vowels and never on a consonant - 2. The stress mark is placed over the
appropriate vowel if lower-case, and beside it if
upper-case - ? but ?, ? but ?, ? but ?, ? but ?, ? but ?,
? but ? - 3. If a word is entirely in upper-case letters,
the stress accent is omitted altogether. However,
if a word stars with upper-case letter and
lower-case letters follow then a stressed mark is
required i.e. - ???d?? but ?????S (Exit)
- Be careful sometimes the meaning of otherwise
identical words is determined the position of the
stress-mark i.e. - ? ????? The old man, but ?e??? robust,
able bodied -
5Some useful observations
- In modern Greek all ?s and ?s have exactly the
same pronunciation
- So why bother with so many different ?s ?s ?
- Well this has not always been the case. Indeed,
in Ancient Greek each letter was pronounced
differently ( ? as the French ê in tête, ? as
short French u in lune, while ? as aw in saw
or long o in go). In order to both preserve
the beauty of the Greek Language and be able to
trace modern words back to their ancient
origins, we keep the different ?s and ?s even
though we pronounce them in exactly the same way.
-
6Greek-English differences
- Consistency between spelling pronunciation of
the Greek letters. Contrary to popular belief
Greek is not a difficult language to speak,
particularly at the beginners level. Unlike
English, the same letter or combination of
letters, is pronounced in exactly the same way
wherever it occurs.
7Two letter vowels (diphthongs)
8Two letter vowels (diphthongs)
9Double-vowels are pronounced separately if
- A diaeresis diacritic (i.e. ) falls upon the
second of the two adjacent vowels (i.e. ?a?d????
donkey gen.). - An accent falls upon the first of the two
adjacent vowels (i.e. ???da??? donkey nom). -
- However, if the accent falls upon the second of
the two adjacent vowels then a diaeresis is
needed in order for the vowels to be pronounced
separately! (i.e. ?a??? wooden boat, ketch). -
10Lets Practice try to pronounce the following
words
11Two-letters consonants (double sounds)
12Some useful observations
- In Greek a noun (i.e. the word Canadian in the
phrase I am Canadian) has to be written
differently when it denotes different gender - ??µa? ?a?ad?? I am Canadian (man)
- ??µa? ?a?ad??a I am Canadian (woman)
- That means that Greek nouns are inflected for
gender - In Greek a noun has to be written also
differently when is being used as an object than
as a subject - ??µa? ap? t?? ?a?ad? I am from Canada
- ? ?a?ad?? e??a? ? pat??da µ?? Canada is my
homeland - That means that Greek nouns are inflected for
case also - In Greek a noun is almost always preceded by an
article (the). The noun and the preceding
article have to agree in gender, case and number.
13Differences between Greek-English languages
continued..
- In Greek almost all words within a noun phrase
(noun, article, adjective, pronoun) are
declinable in gender, number and case. In English
this happens only with the pronouns! - She went to the store. The clerk greeted her and
handed over a small package. The new camera was
hers at last! - Moreover, within a noun phrase all other
declinable words must agree with the noun in
gender, number and case.
14How on Earth we can guess the gender of a given
Greek noun?
- Some tips
- All masculine nouns (nominative/singular) end in
? - Almost all feminine nouns end in either a or ?
- Most neuter nouns end in ?, ?, or µa
- Of course, there are exceptions, and there are
those words ending in ??, which can be of any
gender.
15Differences between Greek- English
- The normal order of a sentence in Greek is like
that in English subject, verb, object. There is
no special tendency as in Latin to put the verb
at the end. However, Greek can vary the order for
purposes of emphasis or euphony much more freely
than in English. For example - ? ???st?? ??????e? t? ?a??a but also T?
?a??a ??????e? ? ???st??. (Christos chases
Mary). - Thus, when you translate from Greek you have to
concentrate at the case of the noun (illustrated
by its inflectional ending) rather than its order
within the sentence.
16Differences between Greek- English
- You will be pleased to know that to ask questions
in Greek there are no changes in word order as in
English , such as you are are you?, or the
addition of extra words (you love me do you
love me?). - You just have to remember that the pitch of your
voice goes up - E?sa? ???a?d?? means you are Irish when the pitch
of your voice goes down at the end and are you
Irish? when the pitch of your voice goes up at
the end
17Personal Pronouns
- Personal pronouns (I, you, he, they) are used to
refer to the three grammatical persons and are
also part of the English verbs since they define
who is doing or receiving the action. Even though
Greek has equivalent corresponding words they are
normally left out and mostly used only for
emphasis - (i.e. ?s?, t? ???e?? ed? You and nobody
else!, what are you doing here)
18Differences between Greek- English
- While in English the personal pronoun is always
used together with the verb in order to
distinguish the person that it is referring to,
in Greek this is not necessary. - The ending of the verb itself differs from the
first person to the second and so on, and this
indicates whether the speaker is referring to
himself or herself, or to another person or
persons
19Asking for something in a shop
20Saying how much you want
21Saying how much you want
22Asking how much it costs?
- ??s? ???e? /??st??e? a?t? (poso kani/ kostizi
afto?) - How much is it?
- ???e? / ??st??e? 6 e??? (kani exi evro)
- Its 6 euros
- ??s? ??????(e) / ??st????? a?t? (poso kanune/
kostizoon afta?) - How much are they?
- ??????(e) / ??st????? 8 e??? ?a? 50 ?ept? (kanune
ochto evro ke peninda lepta) - They are 8 euros and 50.
23Money matters!
The current (20/06/2005) exchange rate is 1.00
EUR 0.667 GBP or 1 GBP 1.499 EUR
24Telling the time in Greek
- Telling the time is not difficult. You just have
to remember that in Greek we put first the hour
and then the minutes - ten (minutes) past five
- ???te ?a? d??a (?ept?)
- When telling the time, the numbers 1,3,4 change
to 1-gt µ?a, 3 -gt t?e??, 4 -gt t?sse???
25Essential telling the time Vocabulary
26Asking for the time
27?a?? ta??d? (Bon voyage) Means of transportation
28Finding out travel times
29Buying Tickets
30Learner A gives the prompts by starting the
dialogue and learner B has to choose which of the
responses on his/her card is appropriate.
35
31?a?? ??e??
32?a?? ??e??
33Places to eat
34Understanding a Greek menu
35??e?t???
36??e?t???
37??? ??a?
38??µ?de? (minced meat dishes)
39Sa??te?
40Try to repeat and translate the following dialogue
- Waiter ?a??µ??a sa?
- You Ge?a sa?. ??? ?at????? pa?a?a??
- Waiter ???ste. ?? ?a p?e?te
- You ??a µp?????? ??????? ??as?, d?? µp??e?, ??a
?a?af??? ???? ?a? ??a µp?????? eµf?a??µ??? ?e??
pa?a?a??. - Waiter????sta, t? ?a f?te
- You ??a t???sa??ta, ??a µ??sa??, µ?a ???a?te?
?a? d?? s??ß????a pa?a?a?? - Waiter?µ?s?? .. ???ste, ?a?? ??e??
- .. After the meal ..
- You ?a sa? p????s?
- Waiter????sta. ?e???ta t?sse?a e??? pa?a?a??
- You ???ste e???ta. ??at?ste ta ??sta. ?ta? p???
??st?µa - WaiterSa? e??a??st? p???. Ge?a sa?.