• Detailed History of the Ancient Greek and Latin Languages.Compiled from Class Notes and Lectures

     

    Eseja3 Vēsture, kultūra

Vērtējums:
Publicēts: 01.12.1996.
Valoda: Angļu
Līmenis: Vidusskolas
Literatūras saraksts: Nav
Atsauces: Nav
  • Eseja 'Detailed History of the Ancient Greek and Latin Languages.Compiled from Class No', 1.
  • Eseja 'Detailed History of the Ancient Greek and Latin Languages.Compiled from Class No', 2.
  • Eseja 'Detailed History of the Ancient Greek and Latin Languages.Compiled from Class No', 3.
Darba fragmentsAizvērt

Language Name: Ancient Greek, Classical Greek, Greek (without reference to time period, the ancient form of the language is usually taken as the unmarked value, and within Ancient Greek, the Attic dialect (see below on Dialects) is the usual point of reference); autonym: hellenike (actually an adjective derived from Hellen, the word for a 'Greek' in general (as opposed to a member of one of the Greek dialect groups; as an adjective, it is modifying an understood noun 'language').
Location: Temporally, Ancient Greek can be located from its earliest attestation in the 14th century BC up through the end of the Hellenistic period in (roughly) the 4th century AD. Spatially, Ancient Greek in its earliest attested forms was spoken in the southern Balkan peninsula, in territory that is now the modern nation of Greece, both on the Greek mainland and on some of the Aegean islands, most notably Crete. By relatively early in the first millennium BC, Greek was spoken over all of the Aegean islands and Cyprus, and there were Greek-speaking colonies in Asia Minor, along the west coast of what is now Turkey, in Southern Italy, in parts of the Western Mediterranean, and in the Black Sea area. …

Atlants