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Encyclopedia > Aeolic

Linguists use the term Aeolic to describe a set of rather archaic Greek sub-dialects, spoken mainly in Boeotia (a region in Central Greece), in Lesbos (an island close to Asia Minor) and in other Greek colonies. The Greek language (Greek Ελληνικά, IPA – Hellenic) is an Indo-European language with a documented history of some 3,000 years. ... Boeotia (Greek Βοιωτια) was a central area of ancient Greece. ... Greece, officaly called the Hellenic Republic (Greek: Ελληνική Δημοκρατία), is a country in the southeast of Europe on the southern tip of the Balkan peninsula. ... Lesbos (Λέσβος) is a prefecture of Greece, part of the periphery North Aegean. ... Anatolia (Greek: ανατολη anatole, rising of the sun or East; compare Orient and Levant, by popular etymology Turkish Anadolu to ana mother and dolu filled), also called by the Latin name of Asia Minor, is a region of Southwest Asia which corresponds today to the Asian portion of Turkey. ... Colonies in antiquity were city-states founded from a mother-city, not from a territory-at-large. ...


It is probable that the Aeolic speakers represent the second (i.e. Achaean) migratory wave of Greeks (Hellenes) from the plains of Central Europe (or, according to other opinions, from what is present-day Ukraine) into their current homeland. Historical lands and provinces in Central Europe Central Europe is the region of Europe between Eastern Europe and Western Europe. ... Ukraine (Україна, Ukrayina in Ukrainian; Украина in Russian) is a republic in eastern Europe which borders Russia to the east, Belarus to the north, Poland, Slovakia and Hungary to the west, Romania and Moldova to the southwest and the Black Sea to the south. ...


The so-called "Aeolic dialect" shows many archaisms, in comparison to the other Greek dialects (i.e. Ionian-Attic, Doric, Northwestern and Arcado-Cypriot), as well as many innovations, too. Arcadocypriot was an ancient Greek dialect spoken in Arcadia and Cyprus. ...


The main traits of the Aeolic dialect are the following:

  • The original Indo-european (and Proto-Greek) labiovelar [qw] turned everywhere in [p], a trait which finds its exact counterpart in the so-called P-Celtic languages (Welsh, Breton, Cornish, Ancient Gaulish etc.) and in some Italic languages, for example Oscan (an extinct language of Italy). This trait may point to an especially close relationship between Greek (Hellenic), Celtic and Italic branches of Indo-european linguistic family. [example: Ionic-Attic ti ? (=what?) < IE *qwid? > Aeolic pi?]
  • The original Indo-european (and Proto-Greek) long a [a:] was retained everywhere, in contrast to the Ionic-Attic dialect, which turned it in a long open e [e:] under specific circumstances. [example: Ionic-Attic me:te:r (=mother) < IE *ma:te:r > Aeolic ma:te:r]
  • The Aeolic dialect made extensive use of the so-called "athematic" verb conjugation, i.e. the conjugation ending in -mi. The same is also found in Irish, where this selection has been generalized (i.e -im). [example: Ionic-Attic phil(e)o: (=to love), Aeolic phile:mi]
  • In many Aeolic sub-dialects (e.g. in that of Lesbos island), the word-stress was transferred in the first (or antepenultimate) syllable. This or similar traits are also found in many other Indo-european languages, such as Germanic, Italic, Insular Celtic, Croatian etc. [example: Ionic-Attic potamo's (= a river), Lesbian po'tamos]
  • The infinitive ending of the Aeolic dialect is -men, the same as the Latin verbal nouns ending -men. This is easily explained by the fact that, in the Indo-european proto-language, the infinitive was mainly used as a verbal noun. [example: Ionic-Attic agein (= to lead, to do), Aeolic agmen]
  • In Lesbian Aeolic, the phenomenon of "psilosis" occurred, as in the Ionic sub-dialect. By this term is meant the absence of the hard aspiration of initial vowels. [example: Attic he:lios (= sun), Ionic e:elios, Lesbian a:elios]
  • In Boeotian the ancient Indo-european (and Proto-Greek) semi-vowel [w] or "digamma" was retained, as was also in the Doric dialect. [example: Ionic-Attic epos (=epos, word, epic poem), Boeotian wepos, Doric wepos]
  • In Boeotian the vowel-system was in many cases changed in a way which reminds of the modern Greek pronunciation. [example: Ionic-Attic lyetai (=he/she unties him/herself), Boeotian lyete, Modern Greek linete]
  • The original Indo-european consonant cluster -sm- was turned in -mm-, as in Gaulish, and not in -im-, as, say, in Ionic-Attic. [example: Ionic-Attic eimi (= I am), Aeolic emmi, Gaulish immi].

  Results from FactBites:
 
Greek dialects - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (515 words)
Aeolic was spoken chiefly on the island of Lesbos (Lesbian) and the west coast of Asia Minor north of Smyrna.
Because Attic was adopted in Macedon before the conquests of Alexander the Great and the subsequent rise of Hellenism, it became the "standard" dialect that evolved into the Koiné.
According to Dion Chrysostomus, a mixture of Aeolic, Doric and Attic-Ionic; however, the "Doric" elements are not actually Doric but rather archaisms within Aeolic.
Greek Language - LoveToKnow 1911 (8344 words)
While Aeolic and the greater part of Doric kept this symbol and the sound w represented by it had disappeared from both Ionic and Attic before existing records begin - in other words, were certainly not in use after 800 B.C. The symbol was known and occurs in a few isolated instances.
The hypothesis of a great poet writing on the basis of earlier Aeolic lays (KAEa avbpwv) in Chios seems to explain the main peculiarities of the Homeric language, which, however, was modified to some extent in later times first under Ionic and afterwards under Athenian influence.
In Aeolic, particularly Boeotian and Lesbian, it was persistent, and so also in many Doric dialects, especially at the beginning of words.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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