| List Of Greek Words With English Derivatives |
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}} This is a list of Greek words with derivatives in English (and other modern languages).
__NOTOC__ TRANSLITERATION There are considerable differences between the various Transliteration s used to represent the Greek Alphabet in English . The table in the sidebar shows:
Greek had no letter h: a Rough Breathing over an initial vowel or diphthong – – indicates that the word was pronounced with an initial h, and a Smooth Breathing – – indicates the absence of an h, but this has since disappeared in speech, and Modern Greek omits the breathings. An initial Upsilon () always had the rough breathing – – hence ''hy'' is very common at the start of words derived from Greek, but no (or very few) such words start with ''y''. The letter Rho () at the start of a word always had the rough breathing – – and is transliterated ''rh''. If a rho occurred doubled within a word, the first always had the smooth breathing and the second the rough breathing – – leading to the transiliteration ''rrh''. For a fuller discussion of these matters, see Greek Alphabet . Note: the distinction between the rough and smooth breathings as shown above may not be very clear on certain browsers. GREEK WORDS WITH MODERN DERIVATIVES The Citation form shown is the form most commonly shown in dictionaries, but this form is often unrepresentative of the word as used to form a compound word, hence the Root form is also shown. The "classical" transliteration as described above is used for both the Citation form and the Root form. The Greek words are shown in Polytonic Orthography , in other words showing the breathings and the fuller range of accents, as used in Ancient Greek. Α ''(h)a'' Β ''b'' Γ ''g'' Δ ''d'' Ε ''(h)e'' Ζ ''z'' Η ''(h)ē'' Θ ''th'' Ι ''(h)i'' Κ ''k, c'' Λ ''l'' Μ ''m'' Ν ''n'' Ξ ''x'' Ο ''(h)o'' Π ''p'' Ρ ''r(h)'' Σ ''s'' Τ ''t'' Υ ''(h)u, (h)y'' Φ ''ph'' Χ ''kh, ch'' Ψ ''ps'' Ω ''(h)ō'' REFERENCES H. G. Liddell and R. Scott, ''Greek-English lexicon, with a revised supplement''. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1996. ISBN 0-19-864226-1 SEE ALSO
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