- The pronunciation of Eta (η) - Latin Language Stack Exchange
I have visited some sources and I can't finally understand that Eta (η) in Ancient Greek pronounced like ' eɪ ' (del ay), or like ' eə ' (h ai r) In fact, should we say an ' ɪ ' at the end of pronouncing η, or it is pronounced only like long ' e '?
- How are the sounds of E (ε) and H (η) different in classical Greek . . .
In Athenaze, the pronunciations of E (ε) and H (η) are given as comparable to the English words get and bed, respectively Other than H (η) being held longer, in my American English pronunciation t
- (Ancient and Modern Greek) Pronunciations of ‘epsilon’ and ‘eta’
This will somewhat depend on what you define as "Ancient", but there are a few things we know for sure, about some nebulous point after Greek started being written down: At some prehistoric point, lengthening an ε gave η, and combining an ε with a j gave ει ε was quantitatively shorter, and η and ει quantitatively longer, in terms of how much time they took to pronounce In
- greek - Was η called eta or heta? - Latin Language Stack Exchange
Background: historically, Η came from the Phoenician letter het (or heth), which represented a ħ sound Some Greek dialects used it as a consonant, which is how we get the English letter "H", while others used it as a vowel, which is how we get the Greek letter "Η" (EDIT: As Alex B points out, some used it for both a consonant and a vowel, like how Latin used "V" ) The name clearly comes
- Ancient Greek: first declension stem - Latin Language Stack Exchange
I’ve been looking for a long time, but I still don’t understand how to get the stem of an Ancient Greek noun that belongs to the first declension Almost every book says that for example -ᾱ, -η, -ᾰ
- Were ῾ (δασεία) and ᾿ (ψιλή) formed from ├, ┤ (H) respectively?
After H was used to denote η, one half (Ͱ) was used for h (about 300 B C ), and, later, the other half (┤) for the smooth breathing From Ͱ and ┤ comes the forms ῾ and ᾿
- Koine Greek - Contract verbs with η - Latin Language Stack Exchange
I’m currently reading Merkle and Plummer’s Beginning Greek book and on the chapter about Contract Verbs I’ve read the chapter and watched the videos, but I’m confused on a point Mounce’s 7 rules
- linear algebra - $d^2u dx^2 - d^2u dy^2 = f (x,y)$ $\rightarrow$ $d^2u . . .
I cant seem to show that $\frac {\partial^2u} {\partial x^2} - \frac {\partial^2u} {\partial y^2} = 4\times \frac {\partial^2u} {\partial ξ\partial η}$ My working is:
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