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The Pre-Greek substrate (or Pre-Greek substratum) consists of the unknown language or languages spoken in prehistoric Greece before the settlement of Proto-Greek speakers in the area. It is possible that Greek took over some thousand words and proper names from such a language (or languages), because some of its vocabulary cannot be satisfactorily explained as deriving from the Proto-Greek language.
There are different categories of Pre-Greek, or "Aegean", loanwords such as:[1]
Various explanations have been put forward for these substrate features. Among these are:[6]
The existence of a Minoan (Eteocretan) substratum is the view of English archaeologist Arthur Evans who assumed widespread Minoan colonisation of the Aegean, policed by a Minoan thalassocracy. However, the Minoan loanwords found in Mycenaean Greek (i.e. words for architecture, metals and metallurgy, music, use of domestic species, social institutions, weapons, weaving) are the result of the socio-cultural and economic interactions between the Minoans and Mycenaeans during the Bronze Age and are therefore part of a linguistic adstrate in Greek rather than a substrate.[7]
An Anatolian, perhaps specifically Luwian,[8] substratum has been proposed, on the basis of -ssa- and -nda- (corresponding to -ssos- and -nthos- in mainland Greece) placenames being widespread in Western Anatolia.[9] However, of the few words of secure Anatolian origin, most are cultural items or commodities likely the result of commercial exchange, not of a substratum.[10] Furthermore, the correlations between Anatolian and Greek placenames may in fact represent a common early phase of Indo-European spoken prior to the emergence of Anatolian languages in Asia Minor and Greek in mainland Greece.[11]
A Tyrrhenian/Etruscan substratum was proposed on the basis of the Lemnos funerary stele,[13] four Etruscan-inscribed pottery sherds from Ephestia in Lemnos,[13] as well as statements in Thucydides where Tyrrhenian was a former language of Athens and that the Tyrrhenians had been expelled to Lemnos.[14] However, the Homeric tradition makes no mention of Tyrrhenians on the island of Lemnos and the Lemnos funerary stele was written in a form of ancient Etruscan altogether indicating that the Etruscans migrated to Lemnos from Italy.[15] Furthermore, the Etruscan language in Greece is a language isolate with no relation to Greek or pre-Greek since, according to C. De Simone, there is "not a single Etruscan word which might be etymologically traced back to a single, common ancestral form with a Greek equivalent."[15]
Greece, Lesbos, Myrina, Greece, Aegean Sea, Dardanelles
Etruria, Indo-European languages, Tyrsenian languages, Phoenician language, Unesco
European Union, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Canada
Doric Greek, Greek language, Armenian language, Indo-Iranian languages, Ionic Greek
Greek alphabet, Greece, Cyprus, Armenia, Christianity
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Ancient Greek grammar, Greek language, Greek alphabet, Koine Greek, Ancient Greek dialects
University of Oxford, Worcester College, Oxford, University of Innsbruck, Bletchley Park, Anatolian languages