View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Opinions] .
fail lulz

This message was edited 11/18/2008, 10:44 AM

Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

There is only one pronunciation, not a modern or something elseonly one pronunciation everything other is mispronouncing and is as pathetic as misspelled names
vote up1
@@
vote up1
LOL"There's only one pronunciation, not a modern" Uhm, yeah it is. It's the MODERN Greek pronunciation, Ancient Greek didn't have the 'i' sound as much as Greek now has...
vote up1
no reallyyou see Ancient Greek was spokken in Greece since '68 as the formal language of the nation
vote up1
What I mean is that no one knows the exact pronunication used 2000 years ago, just like no one really knows what latin would have sounded like exactly. I do know that modern Greek has more 'i' sounds than Ancient Greek had.
vote up1
Who really knows?But…at some places in Greece where were not under the Roman Turks or German we can have the evidence that we want about the pronunciation and the spelling of some words and that is where we –the persons who work with philology and etymology- find the evidence we need about our studies as for the ei- sound it is an ancient I sound (if I expressed right)Anyway I am not to *get into you*
vote up1
Yeah you expressed it right, I understand. I'm not sure about your theory though, because language changes whether there is outside influence or not, but I agree to the part that there can be indication to ancient pronunciations. As to what Kleio really would have sounded like, I don't know. I was just sightly amused by your intial comment, bc of the little I do know about pronunciation differences in Greek.
vote up1
wellI really don’t understand how I must *take* the last line…I really can’t understand from net…well I will have a good faith at peoples (very difficult for me) and I wouldn’t felt insulted…
vote up1
The name is listed as Ancient Greek and you give the modern Greek pronunication while stating that there's only one pronunciation, not a modern or something. That was the amusing part for me, which isn't a personal insult, but I do find contradictions or things that seem like contradictions funny. Pop songs for example are filled with it and I always find it entertaining. Probably shoulsn't have said it, for the exact reason you gave; this aren't easy in communicating over the internet.btw puppy looks like Tumbler or Humphrey to me
vote up1
I didn't start thisI was repling at Akis who said that we need "modern pronnounciation"...
vote up1
I didn't blame you for anything just now. No probs as far as I'm concerned.edit: said I read Akis' post, but obviously didn't.

This message was edited 11/19/2008, 4:47 AM

vote up1
The real problem is that you are using terminology that is hard to follow, and also not making much sense. I think your English pronunciation might be a little off, just as our Greek would be.
vote up1
meaning?
vote up1
Just that your indication of the prn of the ei as like the I in in doesn't make sense in my dialect, I guess just that it was confusing because English really has no truly standard pronunciations as it's so varied, and so the I in in is pronounced all dfferent ways, so I guess it's just that English is confusing, more than that your pronunciation is off.
vote up1
.
vote up1