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- 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
- 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 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
- Understanding η-conversion (Lambda Calculus) - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Understanding η-conversion (Lambda Calculus) Ask Question Asked 11 years, 5 months ago Modified 8 years, 1 month ago
- 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
- Koine Greek - Contract verbs with η - Latin Language Stack Exchange
I’ve read the chapter and watched the videos, but I’m confused on a point Mounce’s 7 rules for contract verbs that he references cover most cases, but don’t seem to cover the case when the verb’s personal ending begins with η (for example, the 2nd person singular passive middle ending)
- Characteristic coordinates $ξ (x, y)$ and $η (x, y)$ for $xu_ {xx} + u . . .
How would I determine the characteristic coordinates for $xu_{xx} + u_{yy} = 0$? This PDE reads $au_{xx} + 2b u_{xy} + cu_{yy} = 0$ with $a=x, b=0, c=1$ The
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