Greek diacritics
has used a variety of diacritics starting in the Hellenistic period. The more complex polytonic orthography, which includes five diacritics, notates Ancient Greek phonology. The simpler monotonic orthography, introduced in 1982, corresponds to Modern Greek phonology, and requires only two diacritics.
Polytonic orthography is the standard system for Ancient Greek and Medieval Greek and includes:
- acute accent
- circumflex accent
- grave accent ; these 3 accents indicate different kinds of pitch accent
- rough breathing indicates the presence of the sound before a letter
- smooth breathing indicates the absence of.
Monotonic orthography is the standard system for Modern Greek. It retains two diacritics:
- single accent or tonos that indicates stress, and
- diaeresis, which usually indicates a hiatus but occasionally indicates a diphthong: compare modern Greek , with a diphthong, and with a simple vowel.
Although it is not a diacritic, the hypodiastole has in a similar way the function of a sound-changing diacritic in a handful of Greek words, principally distinguishing from .
History
The original Greek alphabet did not have diacritics. The Greek alphabet is attested since the 8th century BC, and until 403 BC, variations of the Greek alphabet—which exclusively used what are now known as capitals—were used in different cities and areas. From 403 on, the Athenians decided to employ a version of the Ionian alphabet. With the spread of Koine Greek, a continuation of the Attic dialect, the Ionic alphabet superseded the other alphabets, known as epichoric, with varying degrees of speed. The Ionian alphabet, however, also consisted only of capitals.Introduction of breathings
The rough and smooth breathings were introduced in classical times in order to represent the presence or absence of an in Attic Greek, which had adopted a form of the alphabet in which the letter ⟨Η⟩ was no longer available for this purpose as it was used to represent the long vowel.Introduction of accents
During the Hellenistic period, Aristophanes of Byzantium introduced the breathings—marks of aspiration —and the accents, of which the use started to spread, to become standard in the Middle Ages. It was not until the 2nd century AD that accents and breathings appeared sporadically in papyri. The need for the diacritics arose from the gradual divergence between spelling and pronunciation.Uncial script
The majuscule, i.e., a system where text is written entirely in capital letters, was used until the 8th century, when the minuscule polytonic supplanted it.Grave accent rule
By the Byzantine period, the modern rule that turns an acute accent on the last syllable into a grave accent —except before a punctuation sign or an enclitic—had been firmly established. Certain authors have argued that the grave originally denoted the absence of accent; the modern rule is, in their view, a purely orthographic convention. Originally, certain proclitic words lost their accent before another word and received the grave, and later this was generalized to all words in the orthography. Others—drawing on, for instance, evidence from ancient Greek music—consider that the grave was "linguistically real" and expressed a word-final modification of the acute pitch.Stress accent
In the later development of the language, the ancient pitch accent was replaced by an intensity or stress accent, making the three types of accent identical, and the sound became silent.Simplification
At the beginning of the 20th century, the grave was replaced by the acute, and the iota subscript and the breathings on the rho were abolished, except in printed texts. Greek typewriters from that era did not have keys for the grave accent or the iota subscript, and these diacritics were also not taught in primary schools where instruction was in Demotic Greek.Official adoption of monotonic system
Following the official adoption of the demotic form of the language, the monotonic orthography was imposed by law in 1982. The latter uses only the acute accent and diaeresis and omits the breathings. This simplification has been criticized on the grounds that polytonic orthography provides a cultural link to the past.Modern use of polytonic system
Some individuals, institutions, and publishers continue to prefer the polytonic system, though an official reintroduction of the polytonic system does not seem probable. The Greek Orthodox church, the daily newspaper Estia, as well as books written in Katharevousa continue to use the polytonic orthography. Though the polytonic system was not used in Classical Greece, these critics argue that modern Greek, as a continuation of Byzantine and post-medieval Greek, should continue their writing conventions.Some textbooks of Ancient Greek for foreigners have retained the breathings, but dropped all the accents in order to simplify the task for the learner.
Description
Polytonic Greek uses many different diacritics in several categories. At the time of Ancient Greek, each of these marked a significant distinction in pronunciation.Monotonic orthography for Modern Greek uses only two diacritics, the tonos and diaeresis that have significance in pronunciation, similar to vowels in Spanish. Initial is no longer pronounced, and so the rough and smooth breathings are no longer necessary. The unique pitch patterns of the three accents have disappeared, and only a stress accent remains. The iota subscript was a diacritic invented to mark an etymological vowel that was no longer pronounced, so it was dispensed with as well.
| Acute | Acute, diaeresis | Diaeresis |
| Άά Έέ Ήή Ίί Όό Ύύ Ώώ | ΐ ΰ | Ϊϊ Ϋϋ |
The transliteration of Greek names follows Latin transliteration of Ancient Greek; modern transliteration is different, and does not distinguish many letters and digraphs that have merged by iotacism.
Accents
The accents are placed on an accented vowel or on the last of the two vowels of a diphthong and indicated pitch patterns in Ancient Greek. The precise nature of the patterns is not certain, but the general nature of each is known.The acute accent 'ά' marked high pitch on a short vowel or rising pitch on a long vowel.
The acute is also used on the first of two successive vowels in Modern Greek to indicate that they are pronounced together as a stressed diphthong.
The grave accent 'ὰ' marked normal or low pitch.
The grave was originally written on all unaccented syllables. By the Byzantine period it was only used to replace the acute at the end of a word if another accented word follows immediately without punctuation.
The circumflex 'ᾶ' marked high and falling pitch within one syllable. In distinction to the angled Latin circumflex, the Greek circumflex is printed in the form of either a tilde, a circumflex or an inverted breve. It was also known as ὀξύβαρυς "high-low" or "acute-grave", and its original form was from a combining of the acute and grave diacritics. Because of its compound nature, it only appeared on long vowels or diphthongs.
Breathings
The breathings were written over a vowel or ρ.The rough breathing —'ἁ'—indicates a voiceless glottal fricative before the vowel in Ancient Greek. In Greek grammar, this is known as aspiration. This is different from aspiration in phonetics, which applies to consonants, not vowels.
- Rho at the beginning of a word always takes rough breathing, probably marking unvoiced pronunciation. In Latin, this was transcribed as rh.
- Upsilon at the beginning of a word always takes rough breathing. Thus, words from Greek begin with hy-, never with y-.
A double rho in the middle of a word was originally written with smooth breathing on the first rho and rough breathing on the second one. In Latin, this was transcribed as rrh.
Coronis
The coronis marks a vowel contracted by crasis. It was formerly an apostrophe placed after the contracted vowel, but is now placed over the vowel and is identical to the smooth breathing. Unlike the smooth breathing, it often occurs inside a word.Subscript
The iota subscript —'ι'—is placed under the long vowels ᾱ, η, and ω to mark the ancient long diphthongs ᾱι, ηι, and ωι, in which the ι is no longer pronounced.Adscript
Next to a capital, the iota subscript is usually written as a lower-case letter, in which case it is called iota adscript.Diaeresis
In Ancient Greek, the diaeresis – ϊ – appears on the letters iota and upsilon to show that a pair of vowel letters is pronounced separately, rather than as a diphthong or as a digraph for a simple vowel.In Modern Greek, the diaeresis usually indicates that two successive vowels are pronounced separately, but occasionally, it marks vowels that are pronounced together as an unstressed diphthong rather than as a digraph. The distinction between two separate vowels and an unstressed diphthong is not always clear, although two separate vowels are far more common.
The diaeresis can be combined with the acute, grave and circumflex but never with breathings, since the letter with the diaeresis cannot be the first vowel of the word.
In Modern Greek, the combination of the acute and diaeresis indicates a stressed vowel after a hiatus.