Modern Greek | |
---|---|
Νέα Ελληνικά | |
Pronunciation | [ˈne.a eliniˈka] |
Native to | Greece, Cyprus, Albania (North Epirus), Armenia, Bulgaria, Egypt (Alexandria), Italy (Salento, Calabria), Romania, Turkey, Ukraine (Mariupol), plus diaspora |
Native speakers
|
12 million (2007) |
Early forms
|
|
Standard forms
|
|
Dialects |
|
Greek alphabet Greek Braille |
|
Official status | |
Official language in
|
|
Recognised minority
language in |
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | el |
ISO 639-2 |
gre (B) ell (T)
|
ISO 639-3 |
|
Glottolog | mode1248 |
Linguasphere | part of 56-AAA-a |
Modern Greek (Νέα Ελληνικά [ˈnea eliniˈka] or Νεοελληνική Γλώσσα [neoeliniˈci ˈɣlosa] "Neo-Hellenic", historically and colloquially also known as Ρωμαίικα "Romaic" or "Roman", and Γραικικά "Greek") refers to the dialects and varieties of the Greek language spoken in the modern era.
The end of the Medieval Greek period and the beginning of Modern Greek is often symbolically assigned to the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453, even though that date marks no clear linguistic boundary and many characteristic modern features of the language arose centuries earlier, between the fourth and the fifteenth centuries AD.
During most of the period, the language existed in a situation of diglossia, with regional spoken dialects existing side by side with learned, more archaic written forms, as with the demotic and learned varieties (Dimotiki and Katharevousa) that co-existed throughout much of the 19th and 20th centuries.
Varieties of Modern Greek include several varieties, including Demotic, Katharevousa, Pontic, Cappadocian, Mariupolitan, Southern Italian, Yevanic and Tsakonian.
Strictly speaking, Demotic (Δημοτική) refers to all popular varieties of Modern Greek that followed a common evolutionary path from Koine and have retained a high degree of mutual intelligibility to the present. As shown in Ptochoprodromic and Acritic poems, Demotic Greek was the vernacular already before the 11th century and called the "Roman" language of the Byzantine Greeks, notably in peninsular Greece, the Greek islands, coastal Asia Minor, Constantinople, and Cyprus.