Archive:

Month: October 2016

What did your language sound like 1,000 years ago?

By: | Post date: 2016-10-01 | Comments: 2 Comments
Posted in categories: Linguistics, Mediaeval Greek

Greek: 1000 years ago, the language was already Early Modern Greek. Unfortunately, we have very very very few records of the vernacular to sift from, out of the archaic Greek everyone was writing. We have the Bulgarian Greek inscriptions from 1200 years ago, but by 1000 years ago, the Bulgars were using Slavonic. We have […]

Were all books of the New Testament written in perfectly correct Koine Greek?

By: | Post date: 2016-10-01 | Comments: No Comments
Posted in categories: Linguistics, Mediaeval Greek

Revelation is notorious for its grammatical errors; google Revelation and Solecism (fancy Greek for “bad grammar”) or Barbarism (fancy Greek for “L2 Greek”). You’ll see lots of attempts at explaining it, from the straightforward “he barely spoke Greek” to “he was cutting and pasting bits of the Septuagint without adjusting the grammar” to “there’s a […]

How has pronunciation vs written form evolved in the History of English? Why is it so confusing, to the point that you have spelling contests?

By: | Post date: 2016-10-01 | Comments: 3 Comments
Posted in categories: English, Linguistics, Writing Systems

Up until the late Middle Ages, English spelling (at least, as we reconstruct it) is not that bad. It is internally consistent, and, importantly, it varies from region to region, because they actually spoke different dialects from region to region. Yeah, the mute final <e> was an annoying way to indicate that a vowel was […]