World Languages, asked by Stylegirl3, 11 months ago

State the difference between Latin and Greek words.

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Answered by palPrasun
1

Answer:

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Explanation:

Latin and Greek have quite a lot of similarities, they are both demonstrably “inflected” languages, i.e. they have grammatical case endings in nouns and their verbs and both developed from a common “ancestor”.

The most obvious surface difference is the alphabets with which they are recorded - but even this is a superficial distinction, as the Latin alphabet evolved from the local variant of Greek and over half the letters are obviously the same with most of the difference being in the Greek “double” letters ks, ph, th, ch, ds, and Greek having long and short variants of e and o : so the main difference is not in the alphabet!

Another difference is sentence structure - Latin orders itself generally with the verb at the end of a sentence - simplistically “subject, object, verb”, to signify when you come to the end of that particular train of thought: I believe this has a similarity to modern German. Greek sentence structure is more like English, “Subject, verb, object” and signifies the end of one section and the beginning of another by the use of “particles” - linking words - which we would translate as “But” “And” “However” “Therefore.” etc. But this is not a main difference in the words themselves

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