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  1. Greek Alphabet and its Pronunciation. Upper Case. Lower Case. Full name and pronunciation. Α. α. Alpha (Al-fuh)

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  2. provided practice Greek alphabet practice pages on pages 1-19 through 1-24. Proper penmanship while learning to write the Greek letters is an essential step in learning Greek.

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  3. archive.azurewebsites.net › Documents › The GreekThe Greek Alphabet

    The Greek Alphabet. Notes. The letter is sounded like n before the letters , ", -, and % ) (final sigma) is used only when sigma is the last letter of the word. When a Greek word is transliterated into English, + always becomes y. Table reproduced from Nunn, H.P.V., The Elements of New Testament Greek (8th ed.).

  4. The Ancient Greek Alphabet and Pronunciation. -There is also an h-sound in Greek and it only occurs at the beginning of words. It is indicated by a rough breathing mark placed above the first vowel of the word (or second vowel if a diphthong starts the word).

  5. The Greek Alphabet. All the lowercase Greek letters except omicron are in common use as mathematical symbols. Thirteen of the uppercase letters are not used because they are identical to letters in the Roman alphabet: alpha, beta, epsilon, zeta, eta, iota, kappa, mu, nu, omicron, rho, tau, and chi.

  6. A Table of Greek Letters. Notes. In pronouncing the names of the letters, theis may be pronounced either as long Englishis, so that would sound like \ e," or else as long English es, so that would sound like \fee." Thees are pronounced like English long as, so is pronounced \Ayta" and! is called \omayga." Note that many Greek capitals look ...

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  8. The Greek Alphabet. Vowels. There are seven vowels (α ε η ι ο υ ω) rather than the five in English, because Greek uses different symbols for short and long e (epsilon and eta) and for long and short o (omicron and omega). The other vowels can be short or long.

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