Greek alphabet
Updated: 12/10/2025, 11:16:19 AM Wikipedia source
The Greek alphabet has been used to write the Greek language since the late 9th or early 8th century BC. It was derived from the earlier Phoenician alphabet, and is the earliest known alphabetic script to systematically write vowels as well as consonants. In Archaic and early Classical times, the Greek alphabet existed in many local variants, but, by the end of the 4th century BC, the Ionic-based Euclidean alphabet, with 24 letters, ordered from alpha to omega, had become standard throughout the Greek-speaking world and is the version that is still used for Greek writing today. The uppercase and lowercase forms of the 24 letters are:
Α α, Β β, Γ γ, Δ δ, Ε ε, Ζ ζ, Η η, Θ θ, Ι ι, Κ κ, Λ λ, Μ μ, Ν ν, Ξ ξ, Ο ο, Π π, Ρ ρ, Σ σ ς, Τ τ, Υ υ, Φ φ, Χ χ, Ψ ψ, Ω ω The Greek alphabet is the ancestor of several scripts, such as the Latin, Gothic, Coptic, and Cyrillic scripts. Throughout antiquity, Greek had only a single uppercase form of each letter. It was written without diacritics and with little punctuation. By the 9th century, Byzantine scribes had begun to employ the lowercase form, which they derived from the cursive styles of the uppercase letters. Sound values and conventional transcriptions for some of the letters differ between Ancient and Modern Greek usage because the pronunciation of Greek has changed significantly between the 5th century BC and the present. Additionally, Modern and Ancient Greek now use different diacritics, with ancient Greek using the polytonic orthography and modern Greek keeping only the stress accent (acute) and the diaeresis. Apart from its use in writing the Greek language, in both its ancient and its modern forms, the Greek alphabet today also serves as a source of international technical symbols and labels in many domains of mathematics, science, and other fields.
Infobox
Tables
| Letter | Name | Ancient pronunciation | Modern pronunciation | ||
| IPA | Approximate western European equivalent | IPA | Approximate western European equivalent | ||
| Α α | alpha, άλφα | Short: [a]Long: [aː] | Short: similar to a as in English hatLong: a as in English father | [a] | a as in American English father, but short |
| Β β | beta, βήτα | [b] | b as in English better | [v] | v as in English vote |
| Γ γ | gamma, γάμμα | [ɡ][ŋ] when used before γ, κ, ξ, χ, and possibly μ | g as in English get,ng as in English sing when used before γ, κ, ξ, χ, and possibly μ | [ɣ] before [a], [o], [u]; [ʝ] before [e], [i]; [ŋ] ~ [ɲ] | g as in Spanish lago; Similar to y as in English yellow; ng as in English long; ñ as in Spanish año |
| Δ δ | delta, δέλτα | [d̪] | d as in English delete | [ð] | th as in English then |
| Ε ε | epsilon, έψιλον | [e] | ea as in Scottish English great é as in French été Similar to ay as in English overlay, but without pronouncing y. | ||
| Ζ ζ | zeta, ζήτα | [zd], or possibly [dz] | sd as in English wisdom,or possibly dz as in English adze | [z] | z as in English zoo |
| Η η | eta, ήτα | [ɛː] | e as in English net, but long ai as in English fairy ê as in French tête | [i] | i as in English machine, but short |
| Θ θ | theta, θήτα | [t̪ʰ] | t as in English top | [θ] | th as in English thin |
| Ι ι | iota, ιώτα | Short: [i]Long: [iː] | Short: i as in French vite,Long: i as in English machine | [i], [ç], [ʝ], [ɲ] | i as in English machine, but short |
| Κ κ | kappa, κάππα | [k] | k as in English, but completely unaspirated as in asking | [k] before [a], [o], [u]; [c] before [e], [i] | k as in English make; q as in French qui |
| Λ λ | lambda, lamda, labda, λάμβδα, λάμδα, λάβδα | [l] | l as in English lantern | ||
| Μ μ | mu, μυ | [m] | m as in English music | ||
| Ν ν | nu, νυ | [n] | n as in English net | ||
| Ξ ξ | xi, ξι | [ks] | x as in English fox | ||
| Ο ο | omicron, όμικρον | [o] | o as in German ohne, similar to British English call ô as in French tôt | ||
| Π π | pi, πι | [p] | Unaspirated p as in English spot | ||
| Ρ ρ | rho, ρο | [r] ~ [ɾ] | rr as in Spanish carro; r as in Spanish caro | ||
| Σ σ/ς | sigma, σίγμα | [s][z] before β, γ, or μ | s as in English soft s as in English muse when used before β, γ, or μ | ||
| Τ τ | tau, ταυ | [t] | Unaspirated t as in English stoke | ||
| Υ υ | upsilon, ύψιλον | Short: [y]Long: [yː] | Short: u as in French lune, ü as in German BrüderLong: u as in French ruse | [i] | i as in English machine, but short |
| Φ φ | phi, φι | [pʰ] | p as in English pot | [f] | f as in English five |
| Χ χ | chi, χι | [kʰ] | c as in English cat | [x] before [a], [o], [u]; [ç] before [e], [i] | ch as in Scottish loch; h as in English hue |
| Ψ ψ | psi, ψι | [ps] | ps as in English lapse | ||
| Ω ω | omega, ωμέγα | [ɔː] | aw as in English saw | [o] | o as in German ohne, similar to British English call |
| Former voiced plosives | Former aspirates | |||||
| Letter | Ancient | Modern | Letter | Ancient | Modern | |
| Labial | Β β | /b/ | /v/ | Φ φ | /pʰ/ | /f/ |
| Dental | Δ δ | /d/ | /ð/ | Θ θ | /tʰ/ | /θ/ |
| Dorsal | Γ γ | /ɡ/ | [ɣ] ~ [ʝ] | Χ χ | /kʰ/ | [x] ~ [ç] |
| Letter | Ancient | Modern |
| Η η | ɛː | > i |
| Ι ι | i(ː) | |
| ΕΙ ει | eː | |
| Υ υ | u(ː) > y | |
| ΟΙ οι | oi > y | |
| ΥΙ υι | yː > y | |
| Ω ω | ɔː | > o |
| Ο ο | o | |
| Ε ε | e | > e |
| ΑΙ αι | ai |
| Combination | Pronunciation | Devoiced pronunciation |
| ⟨ου⟩ | [u] | – |
| ⟨αυ⟩ | [av] | [af] |
| ⟨ευ⟩ | [ev] | [ef] |
| ⟨ηυ⟩ | [iv] | [if] |
| ⟨μπ⟩ | [b] or [mb] | – |
| ⟨ντ⟩ | [d] or [nd] | – |
| ⟨γκ⟩ and ⟨γγ⟩ | [ɡ], [ɟ] or [ŋɡ], [ŋɟ] | – |
| ⟨τζ⟩ | [d͡z] | – |
| ⟨τσ⟩ | [t͡s] | – |
| ⟨γ⟩ in ⟨γχ⟩ and ⟨γξ⟩ | [ŋ] | – |
| Letter | Traditional Latin transliteration |
| Α α | A a |
| Β β | B b |
| Γ γ | G g |
| Δ δ | D d |
| Ε ε | E e |
| Ζ ζ | Z z |
| Η η | Ē ē |
| Θ θ | Th th |
| Ι ι | I i |
| Κ κ | C c, K k |
| Λ λ | L l |
| Μ μ | M m |
| Ν ν | N n |
| Ξ ξ | X x [Cs cs, Ks ks] |
| Ο ο | O o |
| Π π | P p |
| Ρ ρ | R r, Rh rh |
| Σ σ/ς | S s |
| Τ τ | T t |
| Υ υ | Y y, U u |
| Φ φ | Ph ph |
| Χ χ | Ch ch, Kh kh |
| Ψ ψ | Ps ps |
| Ω ω | Ō ō |
| Phoenician | Greek | |||||
| | aleph | /ʔ/ | | Α | alpha | /a/, /aː/ |
| | beth | /b/ | | Β | beta | /b/ |
| | gimel | /ɡ/ | | Γ | gamma | /ɡ/ |
| | daleth | /d/ | | Δ | delta | /d/ |
| | he | /h/ | | Ε | epsilon | /e/, /eː/ |
| | waw | /w/ | | Ϝ | (digamma) | /w/ |
| | zayin | /z/ | | Ζ | zeta | [zd](?) |
| | heth | /ħ/ | | Η | eta | /h/, /ɛː/ |
| | teth | /tˤ/ | | Θ | theta | /tʰ/ |
| | yodh | /j/ | | Ι | iota | /i/, /iː/ |
| | kaph | /k/ | | Κ | kappa | /k/ |
| | lamedh | /l/ | | Λ | lambda | /l/ |
| | mem | /m/ | | Μ | mu | /m/ |
| | nun | /n/ | | Ν | nu | /n/ |
| Phoenician | Greek | |||||
| | samekh | /s/ | | Ξ | xi | /ks/ |
| | ʿayin | /ʕ/ | | Ο | omicron | /o/, /oː/ |
| | pe | /p/ | | Π | pi | /p/ |
| | ṣade | /sˤ/ | | Ϻ | (san) | /s/ |
| | qoph | /q/ | | Ϙ | (koppa) | /k/ |
| | reš | /r/ | | Ρ | rho | /r/ |
| | šin | /ʃ/ | | Σ | sigma | /s/ |
| | taw | /t/ | | Τ | tau | /t/ |
| | (waw) | /w/ | | Υ | upsilon | /u/, /uː/ |
| – | | Φ | phi | /pʰ/ | ||
| – | | Χ | chi | /kʰ/ | ||
| – | | Ψ | psi | /ps/ | ||
| – | | Ω | omega | /ɔː/ | ||
| Phoenician model | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ||||||||
| Southern | "green" | | | | | | | | | — | | | | | | | — | | | | | | | | | — | — | — | — | — |
| Western | "red" | | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Eastern | "light blue" | — | | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| "dark blue" | | | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Classic Ionian | — | — | | — | — | | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Modern alphabet | Α | Β | Γ | Δ | Ε | — | Ζ | — | Η | Θ | Ι | Κ | Λ | Μ | Ν | Ξ | Ο | Π | — | — | Ρ | Σ | Τ | Υ | — | Φ | Χ | Ψ | Ω | |
| Sound in Ancient Greek | a | b | g | d | e | w | zd | h | ē | tʰ | i | k | l | m | n | ks | o | p | s | k | r | s | t | u | ks | pʰ | kʰ | ps | ō | |
| Letter | Name | Pronunciation | ||||
| Greek | Phoenician original | English | Greek (Ancient) | Greek (Modern) | English | |
| Α | ἄλφα | aleph | alpha | [alpʰa] | [ˈalfa] | /ˈælfə/ ⓘ |
| Β | βῆτα | beth | beta | [bɛːta] | [ˈvita] | /ˈbiːtə/, references US: /ˈbeɪtə/ |
| Γ | γάμμα | gimel | gamma | [ɡamma] | [ˈɣama] | /ˈɡæmə/ |
| Δ | δέλτα | daleth | delta | [delta] | [ˈðelta] | /ˈdɛltə/ |
| Η | ἦτα | heth | eta | [hɛːta], [ɛːta] | [ˈita] | /ˈiːtə/, US: /ˈeɪtə/ |
| Θ | θῆτα | teth | theta | [tʰɛːta] | [ˈθita] | /ˈθiːtə/, US: /ˈθeɪtə/ ⓘ |
| Ι | ἰῶτα | yodh | iota | [iɔːta] | [ˈʝota] | /aɪˈoʊtə/ ⓘ |
| Κ | κάππα | kaph | kappa | [kappa] | [ˈkapa] | /ˈkæpə/ ⓘ |
| Λ | λάμβδα | lamedh | lambda | [lambda] | [ˈlamða] | /ˈlæmdə/ ⓘ |
| Μ | μῦ | mem | mu | [myː] | [mi] | /mjuː/ ⓘ; occasionally US: /muː/ |
| Ν | νῦ | nun | nu | [nyː] | [ni] | /njuː/ |
| Ρ | ῥῶ | reš | rho | [rɔː] | [ro] | /roʊ/ ⓘ |
| Τ | ταῦ | taw | tau | [tau] | [taf] | /taʊ, tɔː/ |
| Letter | Name | Pronunciation | ||||
| Greek | Phoenician original | English | Greek (Ancient) | Greek (Modern) | English | |
| Ζ | ζῆτα | zayin | zeta | [zdɛːta] | [ˈzita] | /ˈziːtə/, US: /ˈzeɪtə/ |
| Ξ | ξεῖ, ξῖ | samekh | xi | [kseː] | [ksi] | /zaɪ, ksaɪ/ |
| Σ | σίγμα | šin | siɡma | [siɡma] | [ˈsiɣma] | /ˈsɪɡmə/ |
| Letter | Name | Pronunciation | |||
| Greek | English | Greek (Ancient) | Greek (Modern) | English | |
| Ξ | ξεῖ, ξῖ | xi | [kseː] | [ksi] | /zaɪ, ksaɪ/ |
| Π | πεῖ, πῖ | pi | [peː] | [pi] | /paɪ/ |
| Φ | φεῖ, φῖ | phi | [pʰeː] | [fi] | /faɪ/ |
| Χ | χεῖ, χῖ | chi | [kʰeː] | [çi] | /kaɪ/ ⓘ |
| Ψ | ψεῖ, ψῖ | psi | [pseː] | [psi] | /saɪ/, /psaɪ/ ⓘ |
| Letter | Name | Pronunciation | |||||
| Greek (Ancient) | Greek (Medieval) | Greek (Modern) | English | Greek (Ancient) | Greek (Modern) | English | |
| Ε | εἶ | ἐ ψιλόν | ἔψιλον | epsilon | [eː] | [ˈepsilon] | /ˈɛpsɪlɒn/, some UK: /ɛpˈsaɪlən/ |
| Ο | οὖ | ὀ μικρόν | ὄμικρον | omicron | [oː] | [ˈomikron] | /ˈɒmɪkrɒn/, traditional UK: /oʊˈmaɪkrɒn/ |
| Υ | ὖ | ὐ ψιλόν | ὔψιλον | upsilon | [uː], [yː] | [ˈipsilon] | /juːpˈsaɪlən, ˈʊpsɪlɒn/, also UK: /ʌpˈsaɪlən/, US: /ˈʌpsɪlɒn/ |
| Ω | ὦ | ὠ μέγα | ὠμέγα | omega | [ɔː] | [oˈmeɣa] | US: /oʊˈmeɪɡə/, traditional UK: /ˈoʊmɪɡə/ |
| Inscription | Manuscript | Modern print | |||
| Archaic | Classical | Uncial | Minuscule | Lowercase | Uppercase |
| | | | | α | Α |
| | | | | β | Β |
| | | | | γ | Γ |
| | | | | δ | Δ |
| | | | | ε | Ε |
| | | | | ζ | Ζ |
| | | | | η | Η |
| | | | | θ | Θ |
| | | | | ι | Ι |
| | | | | κ | Κ |
| | | | | λ | Λ |
| | | | | μ | Μ |
| | | | | ν | Ν |
| | | | | ξ | Ξ |
| | | | | ο | Ο |
| | | | | π | Π |
| | | | | ρ | Ρ |
| | | | | σ ς | Σ |
| | | | | τ | Τ |
| | | | | υ | Υ |
| | | | | φ | Φ |
| | | | | χ | Χ |
| | | | | ψ | Ψ |
| | | | | ω | Ω |
| β | beta | U+03B2 | voiced bilabial fricative |
| θ | theta | U+03B8 | voiceless dental fricative |
| χ | chi | U+03C7 | voiceless uvular fricative |
| Greek letter | Phonetic letter | Uppercase | ||||
| φ | phi | U+03C6 | ɸ | U+0278 | Voiceless bilabial fricative | – |
| γ | gamma | U+03B3 | ɣ | U+0263 | Voiced velar fricative | Ɣ U+0194 |
| ε | epsilon | U+03B5 | ɛ | U+025B | Open-mid front unrounded vowel | Ɛ U+0190 |
| α | alpha | U+03B1 | ɑ | U+0251 | Open back unrounded vowel | Ɑ U+2C6D |
| υ | upsilon | U+03C5 | ʊ | U+028A | near-close near-back rounded vowel | Ʊ U+01B1 |
| ι | iota | U+03B9 | ɩ | U+0269 | Obsolete for near-close near-front unrounded vowel now ɪ | Ɩ U+0196 |
| Αʹ αʹ | alpha | 1 |
| Βʹ βʹ | beta | 2 |
| Γʹ γʹ | gamma | 3 |
| Δʹ δʹ | delta | 4 |
| Εʹ εʹ | epsilon | 5 |
| ϛʹ | digamma (stigma) | 6 |
| Ζʹ ζʹ | zeta | 7 |
| Ηʹ ηʹ | eta | 8 |
| Θʹ θʹ | theta | 9 |
| Ιʹ ιʹ | iota | 10 |
| Κʹ κʹ | kappa | 20 |
| Λʹ λʹ | lambda | 30 |
| Μʹ μʹ | mu | 40 |
| Νʹ νʹ | nu | 50 |
| Ξʹ ξʹ | xi | 60 |
| Οʹ οʹ | omicron | 70 |
| Πʹ πʹ | pi | 80 |
| ϟʹ | koppa | 90 |
| Ρʹ ρʹ | rho | 100 |
| Σʹ σʹ | sigma | 200 |
| Τʹ τʹ | tau | 300 |
| Υʹ υʹ | upsilon | 400 |
| Φʹ φʹ | phi | 500 |
| Χʹ χʹ | chi | 600 |
| Ψʹ ψʹ | psi | 700 |
| Ωʹ ωʹ | omega | 800 |
| ϡʹ | sampi | 900 |
| Greek and Coptic Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) | ||||||||||||||||
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
| U+037x | Ͱ | ͱ | Ͳ | ͳ | ʹ | ͵ | Ͷ | ͷ | ͺ | ͻ | ͼ | ͽ | ; | Ϳ | ||
| U+038x | ΄ | ΅ | Ά | · | Έ | Ή | Ί | Ό | Ύ | Ώ | ||||||
| U+039x | ΐ | Α | Β | Γ | Δ | Ε | Ζ | Η | Θ | Ι | Κ | Λ | Μ | Ν | Ξ | Ο |
| U+03Ax | Π | Ρ | Σ | Τ | Υ | Φ | Χ | Ψ | Ω | Ϊ | Ϋ | ά | έ | ή | ί | |
| U+03Bx | ΰ | α | β | γ | δ | ε | ζ | η | θ | ι | κ | λ | μ | ν | ξ | ο |
| U+03Cx | π | ρ | ς | σ | τ | υ | φ | χ | ψ | ω | ϊ | ϋ | ό | ύ | ώ | Ϗ |
| U+03Dx | ϐ | ϑ | ϒ | ϓ | ϔ | ϕ | ϖ | ϗ | Ϙ | ϙ | Ϛ | ϛ | Ϝ | ϝ | Ϟ | ϟ |
| U+03Ex | Ϡ | ϡ | Ϣ | ϣ | Ϥ | ϥ | Ϧ | ϧ | Ϩ | ϩ | Ϫ | ϫ | Ϭ | ϭ | Ϯ | ϯ |
| U+03Fx | ϰ | ϱ | ϲ | ϳ | ϴ | ϵ | ϶ | Ϸ | ϸ | Ϲ | Ϻ | ϻ | ϼ | Ͻ | Ͼ | Ͽ |
| Notes 1.^ As of Unicode version 17.0 2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points | ||||||||||||||||
| Greek ExtendedOfficial Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) | ||||||||||||||||
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
| U+1F0x | ἀ | ἁ | ἂ | ἃ | ἄ | ἅ | ἆ | ἇ | Ἀ | Ἁ | Ἂ | Ἃ | Ἄ | Ἅ | Ἆ | Ἇ |
| U+1F1x | ἐ | ἑ | ἒ | ἓ | ἔ | ἕ | Ἐ | Ἑ | Ἒ | Ἓ | Ἔ | Ἕ | ||||
| U+1F2x | ἠ | ἡ | ἢ | ἣ | ἤ | ἥ | ἦ | ἧ | Ἠ | Ἡ | Ἢ | Ἣ | Ἤ | Ἥ | Ἦ | Ἧ |
| U+1F3x | ἰ | ἱ | ἲ | ἳ | ἴ | ἵ | ἶ | ἷ | Ἰ | Ἱ | Ἲ | Ἳ | Ἴ | Ἵ | Ἶ | Ἷ |
| U+1F4x | ὀ | ὁ | ὂ | ὃ | ὄ | ὅ | Ὀ | Ὁ | Ὂ | Ὃ | Ὄ | Ὅ | ||||
| U+1F5x | ὐ | ὑ | ὒ | ὓ | ὔ | ὕ | ὖ | ὗ | Ὑ | Ὓ | Ὕ | Ὗ | ||||
| U+1F6x | ὠ | ὡ | ὢ | ὣ | ὤ | ὥ | ὦ | ὧ | Ὠ | Ὡ | Ὢ | Ὣ | Ὤ | Ὥ | Ὦ | Ὧ |
| U+1F7x | ὰ | ά | ὲ | έ | ὴ | ή | ὶ | ί | ὸ | ό | ὺ | ύ | ὼ | ώ | ||
| U+1F8x | ᾀ | ᾁ | ᾂ | ᾃ | ᾄ | ᾅ | ᾆ | ᾇ | ᾈ | ᾉ | ᾊ | ᾋ | ᾌ | ᾍ | ᾎ | ᾏ |
| U+1F9x | ᾐ | ᾑ | ᾒ | ᾓ | ᾔ | ᾕ | ᾖ | ᾗ | ᾘ | ᾙ | ᾚ | ᾛ | ᾜ | ᾝ | ᾞ | ᾟ |
| U+1FAx | ᾠ | ᾡ | ᾢ | ᾣ | ᾤ | ᾥ | ᾦ | ᾧ | ᾨ | ᾩ | ᾪ | ᾫ | ᾬ | ᾭ | ᾮ | ᾯ |
| U+1FBx | ᾰ | ᾱ | ᾲ | ᾳ | ᾴ | ᾶ | ᾷ | Ᾰ | Ᾱ | Ὰ | Ά | ᾼ | ᾽ | ι | ᾿ | |
| U+1FCx | ῀ | ῁ | ῂ | ῃ | ῄ | ῆ | ῇ | Ὲ | Έ | Ὴ | Ή | ῌ | ῍ | ῎ | ῏ | |
| U+1FDx | ῐ | ῑ | ῒ | ΐ | ῖ | ῗ | Ῐ | Ῑ | Ὶ | Ί | ῝ | ῞ | ῟ | |||
| U+1FEx | ῠ | ῡ | ῢ | ΰ | ῤ | ῥ | ῦ | ῧ | Ῠ | Ῡ | Ὺ | Ύ | Ῥ | ῭ | ΅ | ` |
| U+1FFx | ῲ | ῳ | ῴ | ῶ | ῷ | Ὸ | Ό | Ὼ | Ώ | ῼ | ´ | ῾ | ||||
| Notes 1.^ As of Unicode version 17.0 2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points | ||||||||||||||||
| Combining | Spacing | Sample | Description |
| U+0300 | U+0060 | ( ̀ ) | "varia / grave accent" |
| U+0301 | U+00B4, U+0384 | ( ́ ) | "oxia / tonos / acute accent" |
| U+0304 | U+00AF | ( ̄ ) | "macron" |
| U+0306 | U+02D8 | ( ̆ ) | "vrachy / breve" |
| U+0308 | U+00A8 | ( ̈ ) | "dialytika / diaeresis" |
| U+0313 | U+02BC | ( ̓ ) | "psili / comma above" (spiritus lenis) |
| U+0314 | U+02BD | ( ̔ ) | "dasia / reversed comma above" (spiritus asper) |
| U+0342 | ( ͂ ) | "perispomeni" (circumflex) | |
| U+0343 | ( ̓ ) | "koronis" (= U+0313) | |
| U+0344 | U+0385 | ( ̈́ ) | "dialytika tonos" (deprecated, = U+0308 U+0301) |
| U+0345 | U+037A | ( ͅ ) | "ypogegrammeni / iota subscript". |
References
- For example, ἀγκών.
- For example, εγγραφή.
- For example, εγγεγραμμένος.
- For example, πάπια.
- For example, βια.
- For example, μια.
- By around 350 BC, zeta in the Attic dialect had shifted to become a single fricative, [z], as in modern Greek.
- The letters theta ⟨θ⟩, phi ⟨φ⟩, and chi ⟨χ⟩ are normally taught to English speakers with their modern Greek pronunciatio
- The letter Λ is almost universally known today as lambda (λάμβδα) except in Modern Greek and in Unicode, where it is lamhttps://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%CE%BB%CE%AC%CE%BC%CE%B2%CE%B4%CE%B1#Greek
- The letter sigma ⟨Σ⟩ has two different lowercase forms in its standard variant, with ⟨ς⟩ being used in word-final positi
- The letter omega ⟨ω⟩ is normally taught to English speakers as [oʊ], the long o as in English go, in order to more clear
- The latest archaeological discoveries function as a terminus ante quem, with the proposed dates being placed some time e
- Epsilon ⟨ε⟩ and omicron ⟨ο⟩ originally could denote both short and long vowels in pre-classical archaic Greek spelling,
- Lopez-Ruiz 2022, p. 231; Parker & Steele 2021, p. 2; Powell 2012, p. 240
- The date of the earliest inscribed objects; Johnston 2003, pp. 263–276 summarizes the scholarship on the dating.
- See also: Lopez-Ruiz 2022, pp. 230–231; Parker & Steele 2021, pp. 2–3; Woodard & Scott 2014, p. 3; Horrocks 2014, p. xvi
- The Development of the Greek Alphabet within the Chronology of the ANE Archived 2015-04-12 at the Wayback Machine (2009)http://www.arcalog.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Near-Eastern-Chronology-and-the-development-of-the-Greek-Alphabet.pdf
- Horrocks 2014, p. xviii: "By redeploying letters that denoted consonant sounds irrelevant to Greek, the vowels could now
- Howatson 2013, p. 35; Threatte 1996, p. 271
- Horrocks 2014, p. xviii.
- Coulmas 1996.
- Threatte 1996, p. 272.
- Colvin 2014, pp. 87–88; Threatte 1996, p. 272
- Horrocks 2006, pp. 231–250
- Woodard 2008, pp. 15–17
- Holton, Mackridge & Philippaki-Warburton 1998, p. 31
- Adams 1987, pp. 6–7
- Keller & Russell 2012, p. 5
- Mastronarde 2013, p. 10
- Groton 2013, p. 3
- ResearchGatehttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/277877087
- Hinge 2001, pp. 212–234
- Keller & Russell 2012, pp. 5–6
- Mastronarde 2013, p. 11
- Britannica Dictionaryhttps://www.britannica.com/dictionary/net
- Mastronarde 2013, pp. 11–13
- Mastronarde 2013, p. 12
- "Sigma: final versus non-final"http://www.opoudjis.net/unicode/letters.html
- Mastronarde 2013, p. 13
- Additionally, the more ancient combination ⟨ωυ⟩ or ⟨ωϋ⟩ can occur in ancient especially in Ionic texts or in personal na
- Dickey 2007, pp. 92–93.
- Dickey 2007, p. 93.
- Nicolas, Nick. "Greek Unicode Issues: Punctuation Archived 2012-08-06 at archive.today". 2005. Accessed 7 Oct 2014.http://www.tlg.uci.edu/~opoudjis/unicode/punctuation.html
- Verbrugghe 1999, pp. 499–511.
- Verbrugghe 1999, pp. 499–502.
- Verbrugghe 1999, pp. 499–502, 510–511.
- Verbrugghe 1999, pp. 499–502, 509.
- Verbrugghe 1999, pp. 510–511.
- Verbrugghe 1999, pp. 505–507, 510–511.
- ISO 843:1997 (Conversion of Greek characters into Latin characters)https://www.iso.org/standard/5215.html
- "Greek"http://www.eki.ee/wgrs/rom1_el.htm
- Library of Congresshttps://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/romanization/greek.pdf
- Montarini & Montana 2022, pp. 18–19; Horrocks 2014, p. xviii; Powell 2012, pp. 235–236, 240; Niesiolowski-Spano 2007, p.
- Mannack 2019, p. 31; Colvin 2014, pp. 83–84; Rose 2012, p. 96; Powell 2012, pp. 236–239
- Astoreca 2021, p. 8; Powell 2012, p. 240
- Woodard & Scott 2014, p. 3; Horrocks 2014, p. xviii; Howatson 2013, p. 35
- Swiggers 1996, p. 268; Cook 1987, p. 9; Howatson 2013, p. 35
- Colvin 2014, p. 53.
- "A Companion to the Ancient Greek Language", article by Roger D. Woodward (ed. Egbert J. Bakker, 2010, Wiley-Blackwell).
- Horrocks 2014, p. xviii; Coulmas 1996
- Daniels 1996, p. 4.
- According to the exhibit label in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens: “Kylix. The alphabet. Unknown provenance
- Voutiras 2007, p. 270.
- Woodard 2010, pp. 26–46.
- Jeffery 1961, p. 66.
- Threatte 1980, p. 26.
- Horrocks 2010, p. xiix.
- Panayotou 2007, p. 407.
- Liddell & Scott 1940, s.v. "λάβδα"
- Linguahttps://doi.org/10.1016%2F0024-3841%2868%2990130-7
- Thompson 1912, pp. 102–103
- "Understanding Relations Between Scripts II" by Philip J Boyes and Philippa M Steele. Published in the UK in 2020 by Oxbhttps://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/1810/305290/Understanding%20Relations%20Between%20Scripts%20II_PrintPDF_1.pdf
- Britannica – Lycian Alphabet Archived 2024-07-10 at the Wayback Machine "The Lycian alphabet is clearly related to the Ghttps://www.britannica.com/topic/Lycian-alphabet
- Scriptsource.org – Carian Archived 2023-10-29 at the Wayback Machine"Visually, the letters bear a close resemblance to Ghttps://scriptsource.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=script_detail&key=Cari
- Omniglot.com – Carian Archived 2024-08-27 at the Wayback Machine "The Carian alphabet appears in about 100 pieces of grahttps://omniglot.com/writing/carian.php
- Ancient Anatolian languages and cultures in contact: some methodological observations Archived 2023-09-03 at the Waybackhttps://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.31826/jlr-2019-163-405/pdf
- Murdoch 2004, p. 156
- The Slavonic Languages
- The Cambridge Handbook of Historical Orthography
- George L. Campbell, Christopher Moseley, The Routledge Handbook of Scripts and Alphabets, pp. 51ff, 96ff
- Macrakis 1996.
- Sims-Williams 1997.
- Catalogue of the Coins of the Andhra Dynasty, the Western Kṣatrapas, the Traikūṭaka Dynasty, and the 'Bodhi' Dynastyhttps://archive.org/details/catalogueofcoins00brit
- Zaikovsky 1929
- J. Blau, "Middle and Old Arabic material for the history of stress in Arabic", Bulletin of the School of Oriental and Afhttps://www.academia.edu/38210328/Joshua_Blau_Middle_and_Old_Arabic_Material_for_the_History_of_Stress_in_Arabic_Bulletin_of_the_School_of_Oriental_and_African_Studies_vol_35_no_3_1972_476_484
- Ahmad Al-Jallad, The Damascus Psalm Fragment: Middle Arabic and the Legacy of Old Ḥigāzī, in series Late Antique and Medhttps://oi.uchicago.edu/research/publications/lamine/lamine2
- Miletich 1920.
- Mazon & Vaillant 1938.
- Kristophson 1974, p. 11.
- Peyfuss 1989.
- Elsie 1991.
- Katja Šmid, "Los problemas del estudio de la lengua sefardí", Verba Hispanica 10:1:113–24 (2002) full text Archived 2024https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/VerbaHispanica/article/download/6006/5734
- De le lettere nuωvamente aggiunte ne la lingua Italianahttps://it.wikisource.org/wiki/De_le_lettere_nu%CF%89vamente_aggiunte_ne_la_lingua_Italiana
- "2020 hurricane season exhausts regular list of names"https://wmo.int/media/news/2020-hurricane-season-exhausts-regular-list-of-names
- "WMO Hurricane Committee retires tropical cyclone names and ends the use of Greek alphabet"https://web.archive.org/web/20231218171017/https://public-old.wmo.int/en/media/press-release/wmo-hurricane-committee-retires-tropical-cyclone-names-and-ends-use-of-greek
- WHOhttps://www.who.int/news/item/31-05-2021-who-announces-simple-easy-to-say-labels-for-sars-cov-2-variants-of-interest-and-concern
- The Guardianhttps://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jun/01/covid-19-variants-to-be-given-greek-alphabet-names-to-avoid-stigma
- Handbook of the International Phonetic Association
- For chi and beta, separate codepoints for use in a Latin-script environment were added in Unicode versions 7.0 (2014) anhttps://www.internationalphoneticassociation.org/content/ipa-chart
- Winterer 2010, p. 377.
- Indeedhttps://www.indeed.com/career-advice/career-development/numbers-for-columns-in-excel
- Classics@ Journalhttps://classics-at.chs.harvard.edu/classics2-deborah-anderson-preliminary-guidelines-to-using-unicode-for-greek/#article_5