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i had tried to add a new link, that is considerable important for this article and the Lineal B article, but, a stupid bot, deleted it several times. i give you the link for your consideration, that i think, and many of us i suppost, is extremely relevant:
Glossary of Linear B —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hans soplopuco ( talk • contribs) 19:56, 29 January 2008 (UTC)
The publication of the Thebes tablets (L. Godart and A. Sacconi, 2002) was long anticipated, and their actual content was rather disappointing compared to what had been hinted at by the editors in the previous years. This is less than informative for the Wikipedia reader. Anyone? -- Wetman 05:24, 16 Mar 2005 (UTC)
(comment revised)
I have removed the text: "(the latter may represent a cluster zd corresponding to greek Zeta)".
The phonetic value of the sign transcribed as "z" is not certain, but definitely not /zd/.
Whatever the phoneme was, it usually ended up in alphabetic Greek *as* Zeta, and this is the reason the "z" transcription is used -- as a kind of place-holder for the uncertain Mycenaean phoneme.
And even in early alphabetic Greek, Zeta does not represent /zd/, but rather (most likely) /dz/. /zd/ is a later metathesis (in some dialects) of the /dz/ phoneme and in no way relevant to Mycenaean.
I can't figure out how to get that into the article -- plus a needed discussion on 'q' -- briefly and coherently. I have some vague plan to come back to this with charts and such...
Why is the title of this article not Mycenaean Greek?
Also, is it certain that Linear B was invented on Crete, as the introduction states? It obviously derives from Linear A, but does that allows us to say the script was invented on Crete? --Akhilleus ( talk) 13:52, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
I've moved the "Corpus" specifics over to the Linear B article. Someone might, for instance, uncover at Lesbos a Greek-language incantation to Smintheus in Luwiyan cuneiform. A Linear B corpus is a script-dependent corpus. Hate to be pedantic, but... ( Zimriel 00:45, 29 May 2006 (UTC))
The standard view is that even the Proto-Greek language had five cases. So, even if someone claims that Mycenean had 7 cases, we ca n not include such claims, especially in the lead.-- Michkalas 20:28, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
But the user Macrakis has referenced it. What evidence is there that the standard view is that it had five cases only? Thulium 20:32, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
“ | The proto-Hellenic dialect retained several much earlier traits and traces, such as a variety of vowels, mobility of the clauses of a sentence and facility in the formation of new words. At the same time, it also created plentiful neologisms. Its only ending consonants were -ν, ρ and ς (γάλα < γάλακτ, cf. γάλακτος). The accent did not ascend beyond the antepenultimate syllable (according to the rule of trisyllaby). The eight cases were reduced to five, as the locative and the instrumental were assimilated into the dative, while the genitive was assimilated with the ablative. | ” |
I haven't really got time to go over this now. Evidently it's disputed/uncertain whether Mycenaean Greek inflected in that way. I like the way it's put here [2]
“ | Meillet (1913) stressed the loss of the spatial (ablative, instrumental, and locative) cases, which he called ‘one of the traits that characterize Common Greek’ (1913 [1975], 46); these categories survived in no Greek dialect known in 1913. While the Mycenaean case system is still controversial in part, Hajnal (1995) argues that the instrumental and locative cases both survived and that in a major inflectional class, animate a thematic consonant stem nouns, the only case‑marking change from PNIE to Mycenaean was a dative‑locative plural syncretism. The new ending ‑si (vs earlier loc. pl. *‑su) shows the only clear nominal form‑change that is both unique to Greek and pan‑Greek, but it is a trivial adaptation based on loc. sg. ‑i and instr. pl. ‑phi with final i. The loss of the ablative had begun in IE inasmuch as its forms were parasitic on the genitive in the singular and on the dative in the plural; since the Greek genitive expresses ablative functions, the loss of the ablative can be viewed as an extension of the singular syncretism into the plural. The inflectional system of the Proto‑Greek noun thus differed only marginally from that of its PNIE ancestor. | ” |
If you can think of a better way of writing it in the article, go ahead please. Thulium 21:02, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
According to the "history" of the page, you have added this claim. So maybe you can find also a way to fit it somewhere, but, please, after the standard academic view and stating also that the more than 5 cases view is not widely held. If it stays as it is, no doubt, it will be neither the end of the world nor the first inaccurate thing in WP. -- Michkalas 22:22, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
First of all, Meillet is hardly relevant to the discussion, since he was writing long before Mycenean writing (Linear B) was deciphered. I honestly don't know what the various scholarly positions are on the matter today, but Hajnal is the director (Prodekan) of the philology department of the University of Münster, and specializes in Mycenaean. In fact, he has written a book specifically on the Mycenaean case system: Studien zum mykenischen Kasussystem. Andrew Garrett is a professor of linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, and has worked quite a bit on Indo-European. So you can't just dismiss them! Hajnal and Garrett's work may be too recent to have been discussed in Kopidakis.
As for the Kopidakis quote, it is from the introduction to his book, and the phrase "the eight cases were reduced to five" is unclear about when in the transition from IE to Proto-Greek/Mycenaean. It is also unclear from this text how he sees the relationship between Mycenaean Greek and Proto-Greek.
So as far as I can tell from the (thin) evidence so far, it is clear that some serious scholars believe that Mycenaean had 7 cases, and it is unclear what exactly Kopidakis believes. -- Macrakis 23:05, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
There's an interesting Conservapedia article on this language. Should we maybe also mention this irredentism? ;-) Ucucha 15:40, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
Hi, to my surprise I saw question marks in the phonology section, apparently in places where you are supposed to see letters. That means the Linear B syllabary has been included in Unicode. Great, but can someone give me a link where I can obtain these fonts? I'd like to write an article on Mycenaean on the Limburgish Wikipedia so having such fonts would be very convenient. Steinbach (fka Caesarion) 17:36, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
My dear fellow editors, no one has commented here in over a year. The article is still of start class. I'm impressed by the general knowledge exhibited but I think we rely too much on offhand knowledge or presumed knowledge. For example, there is no pa-si-re-u even though such a word seems at first to fit the theory. Basileus comes from qa-si-re-u where qa- is the labio-velar. P never represents b. There is just no substitute for looking it up in Ventris and Chadwick. These other authors you mention are the cake. First we need the bread. Someone needs to do a line-by-line check to support the unsupported or get rid of it. Who said Linear B was invented on Crete? How could you possibly know that? Did some Cretan leave a document saying he had invented Linear B? Overall, the main thing I notice is the fragmentation. There is no overall coherent picture. There are a number of reasons for this, besides the numerous factual errors. For one thing, no or too few examples. Second, scattered facts not coherent prose. Third, use of linguistically innovative language, such as "disambiguation." We don't want to dazzle and impress, we want to explain. And then, I find the orthography section ought to be under Linear B, as it is not phonology but only orthography. Also there are big gaps. Where does Mycenaean stand in the evolution of Greek? What dialect or dialects? Well, now, I realize this article is a lot of work, more than most of you figured or care to take on. I'm not ready to contribute yet, I'm still on Linear B. I realize how much of an excuse that appears to be. But also, looking down the discussion list I must say I don't care to do battle with you denizens of Wikipedia. I just think the article should be improved and I have just outlined how to do it. Somebody should give it a whirl. Eventually I'll be dancing too but for now I'm on the sidelines. Oh by the way, the "language" in the title is redundant, as someone suggested. Greek is understood to be a language. Is it worth changing the name? Ciao. Dave ( talk) 03:36, 4 February 2009 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: page moved. Vegaswikian ( talk) 20:19, 20 January 2011 (UTC)
Mycenaean Greek language →
Mycenaean Greek — Other articles on dialects are formatted the same way, and there is no similar article to disambiguate from (
Mycenaean Greeks redirects to
Mycenaean Greece). —
Eru·
tuon
20:45, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
*'''Support'''
or *'''Oppose'''
, then sign your comment with ~~~~
. Since
polling is not a substitute for discussion, please explain your reasons, taking into account
Wikipedia's policy on article titles.Wanax is not a uniquely Greek word, it is shared with Phrygian FΑΝΑΚΤ-. Fkitselis ( talk) 19:47, 1 January 2012 (UTC)
Dr. Judson disputes the connection of "da-pu-ri-to-jo" and "pa-ra-ku-ja" to "labyrinthos" and "barakion" respectively. I searched far and wide for other Mycenaean terms using one of the labial symbols that has been seriously linked to a Classical term using beta, only coming up with "pa-pa-ro," linked with "barbaros." Both terms are obviously onomatopoeic, and could have formed separately. Are there any other attested Mycenaean terms using labial symbols cognate to Classical Greek beta? Exodvs ( talk) 18:14, 26 July 2022 (UTC)
Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that it's the "most ancient attested language of the Hellenic Languages" instead of the "most ancient attested language of the Greek Language"? 69.220.158.222 ( talk) 01:16, 28 January 2023 (UTC)
@ Antiquistik: You have added 100 lines from Wiseman's reconstruction, are you sure that this is free content? His reconstruction is in effect a translation and thus his intellectual property and as such protected by copyright. Austronesier ( talk) 16:31, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
i had tried to add a new link, that is considerable important for this article and the Lineal B article, but, a stupid bot, deleted it several times. i give you the link for your consideration, that i think, and many of us i suppost, is extremely relevant:
Glossary of Linear B —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hans soplopuco ( talk • contribs) 19:56, 29 January 2008 (UTC)
The publication of the Thebes tablets (L. Godart and A. Sacconi, 2002) was long anticipated, and their actual content was rather disappointing compared to what had been hinted at by the editors in the previous years. This is less than informative for the Wikipedia reader. Anyone? -- Wetman 05:24, 16 Mar 2005 (UTC)
(comment revised)
I have removed the text: "(the latter may represent a cluster zd corresponding to greek Zeta)".
The phonetic value of the sign transcribed as "z" is not certain, but definitely not /zd/.
Whatever the phoneme was, it usually ended up in alphabetic Greek *as* Zeta, and this is the reason the "z" transcription is used -- as a kind of place-holder for the uncertain Mycenaean phoneme.
And even in early alphabetic Greek, Zeta does not represent /zd/, but rather (most likely) /dz/. /zd/ is a later metathesis (in some dialects) of the /dz/ phoneme and in no way relevant to Mycenaean.
I can't figure out how to get that into the article -- plus a needed discussion on 'q' -- briefly and coherently. I have some vague plan to come back to this with charts and such...
Why is the title of this article not Mycenaean Greek?
Also, is it certain that Linear B was invented on Crete, as the introduction states? It obviously derives from Linear A, but does that allows us to say the script was invented on Crete? --Akhilleus ( talk) 13:52, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
I've moved the "Corpus" specifics over to the Linear B article. Someone might, for instance, uncover at Lesbos a Greek-language incantation to Smintheus in Luwiyan cuneiform. A Linear B corpus is a script-dependent corpus. Hate to be pedantic, but... ( Zimriel 00:45, 29 May 2006 (UTC))
The standard view is that even the Proto-Greek language had five cases. So, even if someone claims that Mycenean had 7 cases, we ca n not include such claims, especially in the lead.-- Michkalas 20:28, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
But the user Macrakis has referenced it. What evidence is there that the standard view is that it had five cases only? Thulium 20:32, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
“ | The proto-Hellenic dialect retained several much earlier traits and traces, such as a variety of vowels, mobility of the clauses of a sentence and facility in the formation of new words. At the same time, it also created plentiful neologisms. Its only ending consonants were -ν, ρ and ς (γάλα < γάλακτ, cf. γάλακτος). The accent did not ascend beyond the antepenultimate syllable (according to the rule of trisyllaby). The eight cases were reduced to five, as the locative and the instrumental were assimilated into the dative, while the genitive was assimilated with the ablative. | ” |
I haven't really got time to go over this now. Evidently it's disputed/uncertain whether Mycenaean Greek inflected in that way. I like the way it's put here [2]
“ | Meillet (1913) stressed the loss of the spatial (ablative, instrumental, and locative) cases, which he called ‘one of the traits that characterize Common Greek’ (1913 [1975], 46); these categories survived in no Greek dialect known in 1913. While the Mycenaean case system is still controversial in part, Hajnal (1995) argues that the instrumental and locative cases both survived and that in a major inflectional class, animate a thematic consonant stem nouns, the only case‑marking change from PNIE to Mycenaean was a dative‑locative plural syncretism. The new ending ‑si (vs earlier loc. pl. *‑su) shows the only clear nominal form‑change that is both unique to Greek and pan‑Greek, but it is a trivial adaptation based on loc. sg. ‑i and instr. pl. ‑phi with final i. The loss of the ablative had begun in IE inasmuch as its forms were parasitic on the genitive in the singular and on the dative in the plural; since the Greek genitive expresses ablative functions, the loss of the ablative can be viewed as an extension of the singular syncretism into the plural. The inflectional system of the Proto‑Greek noun thus differed only marginally from that of its PNIE ancestor. | ” |
If you can think of a better way of writing it in the article, go ahead please. Thulium 21:02, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
According to the "history" of the page, you have added this claim. So maybe you can find also a way to fit it somewhere, but, please, after the standard academic view and stating also that the more than 5 cases view is not widely held. If it stays as it is, no doubt, it will be neither the end of the world nor the first inaccurate thing in WP. -- Michkalas 22:22, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
First of all, Meillet is hardly relevant to the discussion, since he was writing long before Mycenean writing (Linear B) was deciphered. I honestly don't know what the various scholarly positions are on the matter today, but Hajnal is the director (Prodekan) of the philology department of the University of Münster, and specializes in Mycenaean. In fact, he has written a book specifically on the Mycenaean case system: Studien zum mykenischen Kasussystem. Andrew Garrett is a professor of linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, and has worked quite a bit on Indo-European. So you can't just dismiss them! Hajnal and Garrett's work may be too recent to have been discussed in Kopidakis.
As for the Kopidakis quote, it is from the introduction to his book, and the phrase "the eight cases were reduced to five" is unclear about when in the transition from IE to Proto-Greek/Mycenaean. It is also unclear from this text how he sees the relationship between Mycenaean Greek and Proto-Greek.
So as far as I can tell from the (thin) evidence so far, it is clear that some serious scholars believe that Mycenaean had 7 cases, and it is unclear what exactly Kopidakis believes. -- Macrakis 23:05, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
There's an interesting Conservapedia article on this language. Should we maybe also mention this irredentism? ;-) Ucucha 15:40, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
Hi, to my surprise I saw question marks in the phonology section, apparently in places where you are supposed to see letters. That means the Linear B syllabary has been included in Unicode. Great, but can someone give me a link where I can obtain these fonts? I'd like to write an article on Mycenaean on the Limburgish Wikipedia so having such fonts would be very convenient. Steinbach (fka Caesarion) 17:36, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
My dear fellow editors, no one has commented here in over a year. The article is still of start class. I'm impressed by the general knowledge exhibited but I think we rely too much on offhand knowledge or presumed knowledge. For example, there is no pa-si-re-u even though such a word seems at first to fit the theory. Basileus comes from qa-si-re-u where qa- is the labio-velar. P never represents b. There is just no substitute for looking it up in Ventris and Chadwick. These other authors you mention are the cake. First we need the bread. Someone needs to do a line-by-line check to support the unsupported or get rid of it. Who said Linear B was invented on Crete? How could you possibly know that? Did some Cretan leave a document saying he had invented Linear B? Overall, the main thing I notice is the fragmentation. There is no overall coherent picture. There are a number of reasons for this, besides the numerous factual errors. For one thing, no or too few examples. Second, scattered facts not coherent prose. Third, use of linguistically innovative language, such as "disambiguation." We don't want to dazzle and impress, we want to explain. And then, I find the orthography section ought to be under Linear B, as it is not phonology but only orthography. Also there are big gaps. Where does Mycenaean stand in the evolution of Greek? What dialect or dialects? Well, now, I realize this article is a lot of work, more than most of you figured or care to take on. I'm not ready to contribute yet, I'm still on Linear B. I realize how much of an excuse that appears to be. But also, looking down the discussion list I must say I don't care to do battle with you denizens of Wikipedia. I just think the article should be improved and I have just outlined how to do it. Somebody should give it a whirl. Eventually I'll be dancing too but for now I'm on the sidelines. Oh by the way, the "language" in the title is redundant, as someone suggested. Greek is understood to be a language. Is it worth changing the name? Ciao. Dave ( talk) 03:36, 4 February 2009 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: page moved. Vegaswikian ( talk) 20:19, 20 January 2011 (UTC)
Mycenaean Greek language →
Mycenaean Greek — Other articles on dialects are formatted the same way, and there is no similar article to disambiguate from (
Mycenaean Greeks redirects to
Mycenaean Greece). —
Eru·
tuon
20:45, 13 January 2011 (UTC)
*'''Support'''
or *'''Oppose'''
, then sign your comment with ~~~~
. Since
polling is not a substitute for discussion, please explain your reasons, taking into account
Wikipedia's policy on article titles.Wanax is not a uniquely Greek word, it is shared with Phrygian FΑΝΑΚΤ-. Fkitselis ( talk) 19:47, 1 January 2012 (UTC)
Dr. Judson disputes the connection of "da-pu-ri-to-jo" and "pa-ra-ku-ja" to "labyrinthos" and "barakion" respectively. I searched far and wide for other Mycenaean terms using one of the labial symbols that has been seriously linked to a Classical term using beta, only coming up with "pa-pa-ro," linked with "barbaros." Both terms are obviously onomatopoeic, and could have formed separately. Are there any other attested Mycenaean terms using labial symbols cognate to Classical Greek beta? Exodvs ( talk) 18:14, 26 July 2022 (UTC)
Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that it's the "most ancient attested language of the Hellenic Languages" instead of the "most ancient attested language of the Greek Language"? 69.220.158.222 ( talk) 01:16, 28 January 2023 (UTC)
@ Antiquistik: You have added 100 lines from Wiseman's reconstruction, are you sure that this is free content? His reconstruction is in effect a translation and thus his intellectual property and as such protected by copyright. Austronesier ( talk) 16:31, 2 June 2024 (UTC)