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- Newsgroups: sci.classics
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!leland.Stanford.EDU!alderson
- From: alderson@elaine46.Stanford.EDU (Rich Alderson)
- Subject: Re: Powell on Greek Alphabet
- In-Reply-To: andrews@Csli.Stanford.EDU (Avery Andrews)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.170835.27315@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Originator: alderson@leland.Stanford.EDU
- Sender: news@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mr News)
- Reply-To: alderson@elaine46.Stanford.EDU (Rich Alderson)
- Organization: Stanford University Academic Information Resources
- References: <1992Nov20.034020.26274@Csli.Stanford.EDU>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 92 17:08:35 GMT
- Lines: 33
-
- In article <1992Nov20.034020.26274@Csli.Stanford.EDU>, andrews@Csli (Avery Andrews) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov16.183821.26079@leland.Stanford.EDU>,
- > Rich Alderson (alderson@leland.Stanford.EDU) writes:
- >
- >>What may have been optional in the traditional songs was a phonetic
- >>realization of the phoneme /w/.
- >
- >oops.
- >
- >>I don't remember, and don't have any references at hand, whether there was a
- >>"w" series of signs in Linear B. Anyone?
- >
- >There was, also in the Cypriot script (just peered in Chadwick, etc.)
-
- Good! Given the Cypriot evidence, I will forge ahead with a speculation I
- didn't want to make public before.
-
- It is claimed, I think rightly, that the Homeric songs were originally composed
- in an Arcado-Cypriot dialect, rather than Attic-Ionic; both dialect groups are
- derived from South Greek, in opposition to the North Greek Dorians et al.
- Given this, and given the existence of a "w" series in Cypriot, I would claim
- that the optionality of pronouncing /w/ in the songs arose among the *Attic-
- Ionic* aoidoi, whose dialects were losing or had lost the phoneme, and who
- therefore had to learn a foreign sound from their Arcado-Cypriot colleagues.
-
- Thus, there is good reason for the developer of the alphabet to have included
- *wau* in his/her invention, if Powell is correct in his speculations about the
- reason for its creation.
- --
- Rich Alderson 'I wish life was not so short,' he thought. 'Languages take
- such a time, and so do all the things one wants to know about.'
- --J. R. R. Tolkien,
- alderson@leland.stanford.edu _The Lost Road_
-