| ▲ | nephihaha an hour ago | |
The problem is that the ancient and modern Greek alphabets are slightly different. The ancient pronunciations map more easily on to our alphabet. I find the modern ones less intuitive e.g. beta being a V sound. There is an example below, where someone writes Bravo in modern Greek, and uses "mu beta" for the "b" sound and "beta" for the "v" sound. | ||
| ▲ | wvbdmp 26 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |
B/V shifts or mergers are very common, notably in many Spanish variants they will, for example, write “vaca”, betraying the latin root “vacca”, but very clearly say “baca”. Coming from a language that clearly differentates between these sounds, it’s surprising how close they are. | ||
| ▲ | ARandomerDude 32 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | |
For ancient Greek, two great books are: Greek: an Intensive Course by Hansen and Quinn. Basics of Biblical Greek by William Mounce Both are standard texts with solutions easily available online. | ||