Academic literature on the topic 'Proto-greek alphabet'

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Journal articles on the topic "Proto-greek alphabet"

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Savic, Viktor. "On the issue of the formation of the cyrillic alphabet: Some observations." Juznoslovenski filolog 78, no. 2 (2022): 175–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/jfi2202175s.

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While making an indisputably relevant contribution to scholarship and Slavic culture, the discussions about the primacy of one or the other Slavic alphabet, Glagolitic or Cyrillic, and the presentations of their results or the elaborations on the issue that have ensued over the following decades, were very often burdened with stereotypes, errors and other shortcomings. A particularly peculiar case is the construction of an ideological narrative about inventing the Cyrillic alphabet at the behest of the Bulgarian prince, later Emperor Symeon, and its promotion as the official state and church a
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Gilevich, Artem, Mark Frenkel, Shraga Shoval, and Edward Bormashenko. "Time Evolution of the Symmetry of Alphabet Symbols and Its Quantification: Study in the Archeology of Symmetry." Symmetry 16, no. 4 (2024): 465. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/sym16040465.

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We investigated the time evolution of the symmetry of symbols constituting alphabets rooted in the Phoenician script. A diversity of quantitative measures of symmetry of graphemes appearing in Phoenician, Western Greek, Etruscan from Marsiliana, Archaic Etruscan, Neo-Etruscan, Euclidian Greek, Archaic and Classical Latin and Proto-Hebrew scripts, constituting the Phoenician script family, were calculated. The same measures were established for the Hebrew/Ashurit and English scripts. The Shannon-like measures of symmetry were computed. The Shannon diversity index was calculated. Our findings in
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Daggumati, Shruti, and Peter Z. Revesz. "Convolutional Neural Networks Analysis Reveals Three Possible Sources of Bronze Age Writings between Greece and India." Information 14, no. 4 (2023): 227. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/info14040227.

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This paper analyzes the relationships among eight ancient scripts from between Greece and India. We used convolutional neural networks combined with support vector machines to give a numerical rating of the similarity between pairs of signs (one sign from each of two different scripts). Two scripts that had a one-to-one matching of their signs were determined to be related. The result of the analysis is the finding of the following three groups, which are listed in chronological order: (1) Sumerian pictograms, the Indus Valley script, and the proto-Elamite script; (2) Cretan hieroglyphs and Li
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Enrietti, Mario. "Morava of Pannonia Again. Notwithstanding Chrabr." Studi Slavistici, January 29, 2024, 257–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/studi_slavis-15200.

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Constantine-Cyril began to write Slavonic by adapting the Greek alphabet – which we could call ‘Constantinian’, not yet ‘Cyrillic’ – because, despite what Chrabr claims, the Greek cultural tradition and avoiding the accusation of heresy was more important than phonetics. Only in Morava of Pannonia did he create the Glagolitic alphabet due to disagreements with the Latin clergy. In Morava, as previously in Thessaloniki, the proto-Slavic groups *tj, *kti, *dj were pronounced t’, d’ and the appropriate signs were created.
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Scarborough, Matthew. "Relative Chronology and the Outcomes of the Proto-Greek Labiovelars in the Context of Ancient Greek Dialect Geography." Classical Continuum, 2023. https://doi.org/10.71160/szat4356.

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Labiovelars are an exceptional linguistic feature in the context of the ancient Greek language since they are an Indo-European element that Mycenaean shows mostly as such, though they underwent extensive changes in the 1st millennium Greek dialects. Scarborough’s paper offers insights into the diachronic evolution of labiovelars and the geographical distribution of their alphabetic outcomes.
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Books on the topic "Proto-greek alphabet"

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Sanna, Gigi. I segni del lossia cacciatore: Le lettere ambigue di Apollo e l'alfabeto protogreco di Pito : da Tzricotu (Sardegna) a Delfi (Grecia) percorrendo Glozel (Francia). S'Alvure, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Proto-greek alphabet"

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Dosuna, Julián Méndez. "The Pronunciation of Upsilon and Related Matters." In The Early Greek Alphabets. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198859949.003.0007.

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It is universally assumed that the fronting of inherited /u(ː)/ to /y(ː)/ was a relatively late development restricted to Attic-Ionic (to the significant exclusion of Euboean) and possibly to other dialects as well. This paper presents a re-assessment of the evidence available and challenges the general assumption that *u and *ū retained their inherited phonetic value /u(ː)/ in Proto-Greek. The alternative hypothesis is explored that the fronting of /u(ː)/ to /y(ː)/ dates back to Proto-Greek. The presence of /u(ː)/ in the ancient dialects can be accounted for through a secondary backing /y(ː)/
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Conference papers on the topic "Proto-greek alphabet"

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Бърлиева, Славия. "От неолита до ІХ век – паметници на предглаголическата графична култура по българските земи". У Кирило-методиевски места на паметта в българската култура. Кирило-Методиевски научен център, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.59076/5808.2023.07.

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FROM THE NEOLITHIC TO THE 9th CENTURY – MONUMENTS OF THE PRE-GLAGOLIC GRAPHIC CULTURE IN THE BULGARIAN LANDS (Summary) The article presents the earliest monuments of written culture from Gradeshnitsa, Karanovo, and Dolnoslav, as well as the use of Greek, Latin and Gothic alphabets. Greek script in inscriptions in the Greek language has been recorded on a large number of epi¬graphic monuments in the Bulgarian lands, spanning more than a millennium. Latin writ¬ten culture came with the creation of the Roman provinces Macedonia, Thrace and Moe¬sia (after 86 AD, Moesia Superior and Moesia Inferior
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