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Pontic language

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Pontic is a Greek language originally spoken on the shores of the Black Sea, the Pontus. Its speakers are Pontian Greeks.

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

Although Greeks regard Pontic as a dialect of Greek, Pontic and Standard Greek are mostly mutually incomprehensible, both because they developed independently for almost two millennia, and because of the influence of Ibero-Caucasian languages on Pontic in the middle ages. (For instance, Pontic replaces gender distinctions in its adjectives with a strict animacy distinction, alien to both Greek and Turkish.)

Terminology

History of the
Greek language

(see also: Greek alphabet)
Proto-Greek (c. 2000 BC)
Mycenaean (c. 1600–1100 BC)
Ancient Greek (c. 800–300 BC)
Dialects:
Aeolic, Arcadocypriot, Attic-Ionic,
Doric, Macedonian; Homeric Greek.
Koine Greek (from c. 300 BC)
Medieval Greek (c. 330–1453)
Modern Greek (from 1453)
Dialects:
Cappadocian, Cypriot,
Demotic, Griko, Katharevousa,
Pontic, Tsakonian, Yevanic
Romeika sincevismi? (Do you speak Greek?) < Romei, Rum terms comes from Roman, citizen of Roman Empire The Greek linguist Manolis Triandafyllidis has divided Pontic into a Western group (Oinuntiac/Niotika, around Oinoe/Ünye), an eastern coastal group (Trapezuntiac, around Trebizond/Trabzon), and Chaldiot, in the eastern hinterland (around Argyroupolis/Gümüshane -- Kanin in Pontic); most speakers lived in Chaldia.

Location

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 transfer, 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.

Greek speaking villages list from Trabzon

Comparison with Ancient Greek

PONTIC ANCIENT
ipíne ειπείν
pathíne παθείν
apothaníne αποθανείν
piíne πιείν
iδíne ιδείν
fiíne φυγείν
evríne ευρείν
kamíne καμείν
faíne θαγείν
mathíne μαθείν
erthéane ελθείν
meníne μενείν

PONTIC ANCIENT
anevίne αναβήναι
katevine καταβήναι
embine εμβήναι
evjine εκβήναι
epiδeavine αποδιαβήναι
kimethine κοιμηθήναι
xtipethine κτυπηθήναι
evrethine ευρεθήναι
vrasine βρχήναι
raine ραγήναι

PONTIC ANCIENT
κράξαι κράξειν
μεθύσαι μεθύσειν

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

PONTIC ANCIENT
eδoka έδωκα
enδoka ενέδωκα
epika επουίκα
efika αφήκα
ethika έθεκα

External links

Bibliography

 


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