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== Official status ==
== Official status ==
Pontic has no official status. It was recognized as an official language from [[Republic of Pontus|Pontus]]. It was also ''de facto'' the official language of the greek minority in [[USSR]] <ref>[http://www.romeyika.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=78:glosa&catid=10:triton&lang=rm&Itemid= Ποντιακόν επίσημον λαλίαν]</ref>. Currently it is mainly used in the meetings of [[Pontic Greeks]] and in their conversation. The form of the language in Turkey (called ''Rumca'') is widely spoken there according to [[Omer Asan]]. It has a grammar and a dictionary so there are some teaching materials. It also has modern literature which mainly focuses on the immigration from Turkey to Greece.
Pontic has no official status. It was recognized as an official language from [[Republic of Pontus|Pontus]]. It was also ''de facto'' the official language of the greek minority in [[USSR]] <ref>[http://www.romeyika.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=78:glosa&catid=10:triton&lang=rm&Itemid= Ποντιακόν επίσημον λαλίαν]</ref>. Currently it is mainly used in the meetings of [[Pontic Greeks]] and in their conversation. The form of the language in Turkey (called ''Rumca'') is widely spoken there according to [[Omer Asan]]. It has a grammar and a dictionary so there are some teaching materials. It also has modern literature which mainly focuses on the [[Greek-Turkish population exchange]].


==Pontic alphabets==
==Pontic alphabets==

Revision as of 11:20, 2 September 2009

Pontic Greek
Ποντιακά, Ρωμαίικα
Native toGreece, Russia, Ukraine, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Turkey, Germany, The Netherlands
RegionSoutheastern Europe
Native speakers
324,535
Greek alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-2ine
ISO 639-3pnt
ELPPontic

Template:History of the Greek language Pontic Greek is a form of the Greek language originally spoken in the Pontus area on the southern shores of the Black Sea, and today mainly in Greece. Its speakers are Pontian Greeks.

Pontic's linguistic lineage stems from Ionic Greek via Koine and Byzantine Greek and contains influences from Turkish and to a lesser extent, Persian and various Caucasian languages.

Dialects

Greek linguist Manolis Triantafyllides has divided Pontic into two groups:

Speakers of Chaldiot were the most numerous. In phonology, some varieties of Pontic are reported to demonstrate vowel harmony, a well-known feature of Turkish (Mirambel 1965).

Standort

Though Pontic was originally spoken on the southern shores of the Black Sea, substantial numbers migrated to the northern and eastern shores in what was then the Russian Empire in the 18th and 19th century; Pontic is still spoken by large numbers in the Ukraine, Russia (around Stavropol'), and Georgia, and the language enjoyed some use as a literary medium in the 1930s, including a school grammar (Topkhara 1998 [1932]). After the massacres of the 1910s, the majority of speakers remaining in Asia Minor were subject to the Treaty of Lausanne population exchange, and were resettled in Greece, mainly northern Greece. The inhabitants of the Of valley, who had converted to Islam in the 17th century, remained in Turkey, and speak Pontic to this day (Mackridge 1987). In Greece, Pontic is now used more emblematically than as a medium of communication; there is some limited production of literature in Pontic, including issues of Asterix.

  • Greece 200,000 speakers (2001)
mostly in Macedonia (East, Central and West)

Pontic is most closely related to Cappadocian Greek, and the Greek spoken in Mariupolis (and formerly in Crimea, Ukraine) (see Mariupol#Language Structure).

Official status

Pontic has no official status. It was recognized as an official language from Pontus. It was also de facto the official language of the greek minority in USSR [1]. Currently it is mainly used in the meetings of Pontic Greeks and in their conversation. The form of the language in Turkey (called Rumca) is widely spoken there according to Omer Asan. It has a grammar and a dictionary so there are some teaching materials. It also has modern literature which mainly focuses on the Greek-Turkish population exchange.

Pontic alphabets

Pontic in Greece is written in historical Greek orthography, with diacritics: σ̌ ζ̌ ξ̌ ψ̌ for ʒ pʃ/, α̈ ο̈ for ø] (phonological /ia io/). Pontic in Turkey is written in Latin script following Turkish conventions, and Pontic in Russia is written in Cyrillic. In early Soviet times, Pontic was written in the Greek script phonetically, as shown below, using digraphs instead of diacritics; ø] were written out as ια, ιο.

Greek
alphabet
Turkish
alphabet
Russian
alphabet
IPA Example
Α α A a А а [a] ρομεικα, romeyika, ромейика
Β β V v В в [v] κατιβενο, kativeno, кативено
Γ γ Ğ ğ Г г [ɣ] [ʝ] γανεβο, ğanevo, ганево
Δ δ DH dh [ð] δοντι, dhonti, донти
Ε ε E e Е е [e] εγαπεςα, eğapesa, егапеса
Ζ ζ Z z З з [z] ζαντος, zantos, зантос
ΖΖ ζζ J j Ж ж [ʒ] πυρζζυας, burjuvas, буржуас
Θ θ TH th [θ] θεκο, theko, теко
Ι ι İ i И и [i] τοςπιτοπον, tospitopon, тоспитопон
Κ κ K k К к [k] καλατζεμαν, kalaceman, калачеман
Λ λ L l Л л [l] λαλια, lalia, лалиа
Μ μ M m М м [m] μανα, mana, мана
Ν ν N n Н н [n] ολιγον, oliğоn, олигон
Ο ο O o О о [o] τεμετερον, temeteron, теметерон
Π π P p П п [p] εγαπεςα, eğapesa, егапеса
Ρ ρ R r Р р [ɾ] ρομεικα, romeyika, ромейка
Σ ς S s С с [s] καλατζεπςον, kalacepson, калачепсон
ΣΣ ςς Ş ş Ш ш [ʃ] ςςερι, şeri, шери
Τ τ T t Т т [t] νοςτιμεςα, nostimesa, ностимеса
ΤΖ τζ C c Ч ч [ʤ] καλατζεμαν, kalaceman, калачеман
ΤΣ τς Ç ç Ц ц [tʃ] μανιτςα, maniça, маница
Υ υ U u У у [u] νυς, nus, нус
Φ φ F f Ф ф [f] εμορφα, emorfa, эморфа
Χ χ H, KH (sert H) Х х [x] χαςον, hason, хасон

Archaisms

Grammar:

  • Preservation of the ancient pronunciation of 'η' as 'ε' (κέπιν = κήπιον, κλέφτες = κλέπτης, συνέλικος = συνήλικος, νύφε = νύ(μ)φη, έγκα = ἤνεγκον, έτον = ἦτον, έκουσα = ἤκουσα etc).
  • Preservation of the ancient pronunciation 'ω' as 'o' where Koine Greek received it as 'ου' (ζωμίν = ζουμί, καρβώνι, ρωθώνι etc).
  • Preservation of the ancient nominative suffix of neutral diminutive nouns in 'ιον' (παιδίον, χωρίον).
  • Preservation of the Ionic consonant pair 'σπ' instead of Koine 'σφ' (σποντύλιν, σπἰγγω, σπιντόνα).
  • Preservation of the termination of feminine compound adjectives in -ος (ή άλαλος, ή άνοστος, ή έμορφος).
  • The declination of male nouns from singular, nominative termination '-on' to genitive '-ος' (ό νέον -> τή νέονος, ο πάππον -> τη πάππονος, ό λύκον -> τή λύκονος, ο Τούρκον -> τη Τούρκονος etc).
  • The aorist ordering form in -ον (ανάμνον, μείνον, κόψον, πίσον, ράψον, σβήσον).
  • The middle voice verb termination in -ούμαι (ανακατούμαι, σκοτούμαι, στεφανούμαι).
  • The passive voice aorist termination in -θα (anc. -θην): εγαπέθα, εκοιμέθα, εστάθα etc.
  • The imperative form of passive aorist in -θετε (anc -θητι): εγαπέθα, εκοιμέθα, εστάθα.
  • The sporadic use of infinitives (εποθανείναι, μαθείναι, κόψ'ναι, ράψ'ναι, χαρίσ'ναι, αγαπέθειν, κοιμεθείν).
  • The ancient accenting of nouns in vocative form: άδελφε, Νίκολα, Μάρια.
  • The sporadic use of 'ας' in the place of 'να': δός με ας φάγω.

Comparison with Ancient Greek

  • Example 1: Pontic en (is), Ancient Greek esti, Koine idiomatic form enesti, Biblical form eni, Modern Greek ine
  • Example 2: Pontic temeteron (ours), Ancient Greek to(n) hemeteron, Modern Greek to(n) * mas
  • Example 3: Pontic diminutive pedhin (little child), Ancient Greek paidion, Standard Greek pedhi
  • Example 4 (combining 2 and 3): Pontic temeteron to pedin (our little child), Ancient Greek/Koine to hemeteron paidion, Modern Greek to pedi mas
  • 1. In Trapezounda Greek attach /e/ sound to ancient aorist suffix –ειν
PONTIC ANCIENT
ipíne εἰπεῖν
pathíne παθεῖν
apothaníne ἀποθανεῖν
piíne πιεῖν
iδíne εἰδεῖν
fiíne φυγεῖν
evríne εὑρεῖν
kamíne καμεῖν
faíne φαγεῖν
mathíne μαθεῖν
erthéane ἐλθεῖν
meníne μένειν
  • 2. Similar infinitive –ηνα
PONTIC ANCIENT
anevίne ἀναβῆναι
katevine καταβῆναι
embine ἐμβῆναι
evjine ἐκβῆναι
epiδeavine ἀποδιαβῆναι
kimethine κοιμηθῆναι
xtipethine κτυπηθῆναι
evrethine εὑρεθῆναι
vrasine βραχῆναι
raine ῥαγῆναι
  • 3. First aorist -αι change with second aorist -εῖν
PONTIC ANCIENT
κράξαι κράξειν
μεθύσαι μεθύσειν
  • 4. Infinitive aorist /e/

ράψεινε, κράξεινε, μεθύσεινε, καλέσεινε, λαλήσεινε, κτυπήσεινε, καθίσεινε

  • 5. Same aorist suffix –ka (-ka was also the regular perfect suffix)
PONTIC ANCIENT
eδoka ἔδωκα
enδoka ἐνέδωκα
epika ἐποίηκα
efika ἀφῆκα
ethika ἔθηκα
  • 6. –ine infinitive change to -eane

Notes

See Also

Bibliography

  • Georges Drettas, Aspects pontiques, ARP, 1997, ISBN 2-9510349-0-3. "... marks the beginning of a new era in Greek dialectology. Not only is it the first comprehensive grammar of Pontic not written in Greek, but it is also the first self-contained grammar of any Greek “dialect” written, in the words of Bloomfield, “in terms of its own structure”." (Janse)
  • Özhan Öztürk, Karadeniz: Ansiklopedik Sözlük. 2 Cilt. Heyamola Yayıncılık. İstanbul, 2005. ISBN 975-6121-00-9
  • Mackridge, P. 1987. Greek-Speaking Moslems of North-East Turkey: Prolegomena to Study of the Ophitic Sub-Dialect of Pontic. Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 11: 115–137.
  • Τομπαΐδης, Δ.Ε. 1988. Η Ποντιακή Διάλεκτος. Αθήνα: Αρχείον Πόντου. (Tompaidis, D.E. 1988. The Pontic Dialect. Athens: Archeion Pontou.)
  • Τομπαΐδης, Δ.Ε. ϗ Συμεωνίδης, Χ.Π. 2002. Συμπλήρωμα στο Ιστορικόν Λεξικόν της Ποντικής Διαλέκτου του Α.Α. Παπαδόπουλου. Αθήνα: Αρχείον Πόντου. (Tompaidis, D.E. and Simeonidis, C.P. 2002. Additions to the Historical Lexicon of the Pontic Dialect of A.A. Papadopoulos. Athens: Archeion Pontou.)
  • Παπαδόπουλος, Α.Α. 1955. Ιστορική Γραμματική της Ποντικής Διαλέκτου. Αθήνα: Επιτροπή Ποντιακών Μελετών. (Papadopoulos, A.A. 1955. Historical Grammar of the Pontic Dialect. Athens: Committee for Pontian Studies.)
  • Παπαδόπουλος, Α.Α. 1958–61. Ιστορικόν Λεξικόν της Ποντικής Διαλέκτου. 2 τόμ. Αθήνα: Μυρτίδης. (Papadopoulos, A.A. 1958–61. Historical Lexicon of the Pontic Dialect. 2 volumes. Athens: Mirtidis.)
  • Οικονομίδης, Δ.Η. 1958. Γραμματική της Ελληνικής Διαλέκτου του Πόντου. Αθήνα: Ακαδημία Αθηνών. (Oikonomidis, D.I. 1958. Grammar of the Greek Dialect of Pontos. Athens: Athens Academy.)
  • Τοπχαρά, Κ. 1998 [1932]. Η Γραμματική της Ποντιακής: Ι Γραματικι τι Ρομεικυ τι Ποντεικυ τι Γλοςας. Θεσσαλονίκη: Αφοί Κυριακίδη. (Topcharas, K. 1998 [1932]. The Grammar of Pontic. Thessaloniki: Afoi Kiriakidi.)