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Attic greek declensions.
The earliest written records in greek date from the 16th to 11th centuries bc and exist in an archaic writing system linear b belonging to the mycenaean greeks.
Greek is a branch of the indo european language family which includes english in historical times it already existed in several dialects see article on greek dialects one of which was attic.
Both inflect the same s 238.
The attic declension is a group of second declension nouns and adjectives in the attic dialect of ancient greek all of whose endings have long vowels in contrast normal second declension nouns have some short vowels and some long vowels.
Nominative singular in nu first and third declension of λᾰμβᾰ νων.
νεώς νεώ temple and λεώς λεώ the people folk.
An intensive course and mastronarde s introduction to attic greek but are mainly meant to provide one page overviews of some important verbal paradigms satisfactory versions.
The ancient greek third declension also known as the consonant declension comprises the most diverse and potentially confusing forms of nominal inflection.
In attic greek this changes to η everywhere except after ε ι or ρ.
Since the stem vowels provide a sort of buffer between the stems and inflectional.
Nouns adjectives the definite article.
οἰκίᾱ building house χώρᾱ land place.
Nouns and adjectives in ης and υς.
In attic greek most feminine nouns of the first declension have eta throughout the singular because long alpha was usually changed to eta in this dialect except after epsilon iota or rho.
The first declension genitive plural always takes a circumflex on the last syllable.
This change has no meaning.
λᾰμβᾰ νον attic.
The third or consonant declension.
After ε ι or ρ in attic and koine greek when a first declension noun has a stem ending in ε ι or ρ ᾱ appears instead of η in all cases in the singular e g.
For declension in other dialects see appendix ancient greek dialectal declension.
This is two pages.
Only two words in our vocabulary list belong to the attic declension.
The third declension does not have a stem vowel as the first α η and second ο declensions do.
It is just a difference in pronunciation.
The first declension includes mostly feminine nouns but also a few masculine nouns including agent nouns in της patronyms in ίδης and demonyms.
The a and o declensions.