Academic literature on the topic 'Greek'

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Journal articles on the topic "Greek"

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Kisilier, M., and I. Vasilieva. "«Greek myth» of Azov Greeks." Indo-European linguistics and classical philology XXII (June 7, 2018): 274–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.30842/ielcp230690152221.

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BERK, Mehmet Fatih. "THE SCYTHIANS: THE OTHER OF THE GREEKS." Selçuk Üniversitesi Türkiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi, no. 54 (June 13, 2022): 23–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.21563/sutad.1129956.

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The Greeks have a distinctive status in historiography. In fact, some historians declared the Greeks as the "inventor of history" and Herodotus, the Greek historian called as “father of history. Following the Greco-Persian Wars, the Greeks gained self-confidence and described the non- Greek- speaking peoples as “barbarian”. This might be the first “othering” movement in historiography. The Scythians, one of the ancient societies of Turkish history, between the 8th and 4th century BC in history timeline. When the Greek historiography began, the Scythians were the neighbors of the Greek societies. Because of this adjacency, many Greek authors and historians depicted much information on the Scythian society in addition to Persian, Assyrian and Chinese sources about Scythian history. In our study, the Greek historiography was examined in the context of "barbarian and the other", by attributing the inability to be "objective" in historiography. Then, a portrait of the “the other (marginalized) Scythians” was searched in the works of Greek authors and historians. In Greek historiography, it has been observed that the Scythians were marginalized at least as much as the Persians.
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Arvaniti, Amalia. "Cypriot Greek." Journal of the International Phonetic Association 29, no. 2 (December 1999): 173–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002510030000654x.

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Cypriot Greek is the dialect of Modern Greek spoken on the island of Cyprus by approximately 650,000 people and also by the substantial immigrant communities of Cypriots in the UK, North America, Australia, South Africa and elsewhere. Due to lengthy isolation, Cypriot Greek is so distinct from Standard Greek as to be often unintelligible to speakers of the Standard. Greek Cypriot speakers, on the other hand, have considerably less difficulty understanding Greeks, since Standard Greek is the official language of Cyprus, and as such it is the medium of education and the language of the Cypriot media. However, in every day situations Cypriot Greek is the only variety used among Cypriots. Cypriot Greek is not homogeneous but exhibits considerable geographical variation (Newton 1972). The variety described here is that used by educated speakers, particularly the inhabitants of the capital, Nicosia. Although influenced by increasing contact with Standard Greek, Cypriot Greek retains most of its phonological and phonetic characteristics virtually intact. There is no established orthography for Cypriot Greek; however, certain, rather variable, conventions have emerged, based on Greek historical orthography but also including novel combinations of letters in order to represent sounds that do not exist in the Standard (e.g. σι for [∫]); a version of these conventions has been adopted here for the sample text. The transcription is based on the speech of an educated male speaker from Nicosia in his mid-thirties, who read the text twice at normal speed and in an informal manner, he also assisted in rendering the text from Standard to Cypriot Greek.
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Nikitina, Inna, and Ksenia Klimova. "The traditional culture and the language of the “Russian Greeks” in Sochi: A review of an ethnolinguistic expedition." Slavic Almanac 2022, no. 3-4 (2022): 249–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2073-5731.2022.3-4.2.06.

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The traditional culture and the language of the Greek population of Sochi in July 2022 for the first time became the subject of an ethnolinguistic study by Russian researchers. The Greek population (natives of the region of Pontus, located in modern Turkey) initially appeared in these territories in the second half of the 19th century. During the Stalin era, the number of Greeks decreased significantly, however, the language (Pontic dialect of the Greek language) and elements of traditional culture in places where Greeks were densely populated are preserved to this day. In the folk calendar, family rituals, folk mythology of the modern Greek population, there are not only common Greek elements that unite the Pontic Greeks of the diaspora with the wide “Greek world”, but also characteristic features that allow us to draw a preliminary conclusion about the preservation of archaic elements of culture (the rite of making rain “koshkotera”, etc.). Many elements of traditional culture were influenced by neighboring Slavic (Russian) and other Caucasian (Armenian, Georgian) traditions.
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Eddy, Wallace. "Greek and Non-Greek Affiliation." NASPA Journal 28, no. 1 (July 1, 1990): 54–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220973.1990.11072187.

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Snodgrass, A. M. "Greek Archaeology and Greek History." Classical Antiquity 4, no. 2 (October 1, 1985): 193–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25010833.

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Price, R. "Greek Yoghurt must be Greek." Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice 10, no. 1 (November 19, 2014): 58–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jiplp/jpu216.

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Pedersen, Olaf. "Greek Astronomers and Their Neighbours." International Astronomical Union Colloquium 91 (1987): 63–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0252921100105871.

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In Europe it has been customary to regard the ancient Greeks as our intellectual ancestors. Greek science was seen as the fountainhead from which modern European science ultimately derived both its existence and its characteristic features. This was not a completely empty idea. Each time a modern astronomer mentions a planet, the perigee and apogee of its orbit, its periods and their various anomalies, he is using so many Greek words. Moreover, until about a hundred years ago the extant works of the Greeks were the earliest scientific texts known to European scholars so that Greek science acquired a unique position in the European mind,and that ancient Greek culture in general became ‘classical’ and thus an ideal model or pattern for civilization as such. In consequence, the traditional European History of Science became an account of how science arose among the Greeks, how it penetrated into other cultural areas, and how it was sometimes eclipsed and again reborn in one of the so-called ‘renaissances’ of which European historians are so fond to speak.
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Labetska, Yuliia. "“THE BRIDGE OF ARTA” – A RUMEIC VERSION OF THE BALLAD OF THE WALLED-UP WIFE." Studia Linguistica, no. 18 (2021): 83–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/studling2021.18.83-97.

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The article deals with the analysis of two versions of a traditional ballad of the walled-up wife, widespread among the peoples of the Balkans and Asia Minor, recorded in the folklore of one of the national minorities of Ukraine – the Rumei Greeks. Linguistic analysis of text samples allows the author to trace the possible influences and cultural ties of the Azov Greeks with the metropolis. Structural-semantic and linguo-stylistic analysis of the Rumeic variants of the ballad demonstrated their pre-Azovian and pre-Crimean origins. One of the texts contains the motive, which is typical for the Pontic versions of the ballad. The language of both analyzed texts is dialectal, the Rumeika / Mariupol Greek, while it also has certain features of Demotic Greek, which can be explained not only by the archaic origin of the song, but also by the influence of Demotic Greek on Mariupol Greek already during the Azov period, when the policy of Hellenization of the Greek population of Ukraine was introduced in 1926-1938. It was concluded that the short period in the history of the Azov Greeks, when they gained access to the common Greek cultural tradition through the study of Demotic Greek and literature in it, had a certain influence on their language and folk poetry.
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Anastasiadou, Sofia D. "Greek Students’ Efforts to Define Green Terms." International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic, and Social Sustainability: Annual Review 7, no. 1 (2011): 131–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.18848/1832-2077/cgp/v07i01/54872.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Greek"

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Hopkins, Philip Everette. "Thinking the Greeks more Greek-like : an hermeneutic analysis of understanding in early Greek thought /." Digital version accessible at:, 1999. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/main.

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Ma, Hong Newman Harvey B. "Experimental tests of electroweak theory with [Greek letter mu]+[Greek letter mu]- and [Greek letter mu]+[Greek letter mu]-[Greek letter gamma] final states from e+e- annihilation /." Diss., Pasadena, Calif. : California Institute of Technology, 1988. http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-12072006-093947.

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Giannakopoulou, Aglaia. "Ancient Greek sculpture in modern Greek poetry, 1860-1960." Thesis, King's College London (University of London), 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.322258.

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Vlassopoulos, Kostas. "Unthinking the Greek polis : ancient Greek history beyond Eurocentrism." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2005. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.615146.

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Botetzagias, Iosif. "The environmental movement in Greece, 1973 to the present : an illusory social movement in a semi-peripheral country." Thesis, Keele University, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.252598.

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Varto, Emily. "Early Greek kinship." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17421.

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Kinship is an important factor in modern explanations of social, political, and economic change in Early Greece (ca. 1000-450 BCE), particularly in social evolutionary schemes that see states develop from kinship-based clan societies. Following challenges to such schemes in several disciplines, including Classics, and following theoretical and methodological upheavals in anthropological kinship studies, our ideas and methodologies concerning families, descent groups, and kinship in Early Greece need to be reconsidered. In this dissertation, in order to avoid both applying typologies and employing universal biological kinship terminologies as points of analysis, a contextual methodology was developed to explore textual and archaeological evidence for ideas of kinship. Using this methodology, the expression and manifestation of kinship ideas were examined in Early Greek genealogical material, burial practices and patterns, and domestic architecture, taking each source individually to achieve a level of interpretative independence. Early Greek genealogies are usually linear and descendent-focused or tendrilled and ancestor-focused, and include sections of story-telling that are an integral part of the descent information. List-like genealogies are therefore not the standard structure for Early Greek genealogies and the few late extant examples may be associated with literary techniques or epigraphic traditions. The genealogies are mythico-historical and connected the legendary past with the present in the interests of individuals and states and were not charters determining status or membership in particular groups. Early Greek burial practices and patterns were informed by an idea of descent and an idea of households over a few generations, represented by small mixed burial groups. Residency patterns and changes in Early Greek domestic architecture suggest household units, some of which were participating and became successful in the domestic economy and in agricultural trade. A synthesis of the evidence reveals three broad overlapping Early Greek kinship ideas: blood and biology, generational households, and descent and ancestors. These ideas involve inheritance, ethnicity, success, wealth, and elitism. They therefore illuminate kinship’s role in social, political, and economic differentiation and power and resituate it in theorizing about the developing Greek polis.
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Markidou, Vasiliki. "Shakespeare's Greek plays." Thesis, Lancaster University, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.533059.

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This thesis traces the development of Shakespeare's conceptualisation of ancient and early modem Greece through an analysis of his Greek plays. Contrary to the numerous studies of Shakespeare's Roman plays, very little interest has been paid to his Greek ones. The single extensive study conducted on the subject to the present, has focused exclusively on the structural interrelation between classical Greece and Renaissance Britain, failing to take into consideration early modern Greece. The specific thesis aims at filling this crucial gap. It sets about to demonstrate that Shakespeare's contemporary Greece was equally, if not in some ways more important, than classical Greece as a moving force in the creation of the Shakespearean reek plays. Reading these literary texts through a historicist approach and in conjunction with a wide variety of other discursive forms ranging from travelogues to ambassadorial reports to historiographies, this thesis demonstrates the deeply contradictory role of Greece in both sustaining and dislocating Renaissance English authority. It reveals that Elizabethan and Jacobean England struggled to achieve selfrepresentation and establish itself as an imperial authority through an emulation of classical Greek cultural, linguistic and imperial models, while simultaneously endeavouring to break free from the overdominant influence of these models and establish an independent identity. At the same time, Renaissance England's ambition to achieve self-representation was unsettled by its anxiety over the vulnerability of Europe's eastern borders, deepened by the subjection of early modem Greece to the Otttoman Empire. Shakespeare's Greek plays are informed by and engage with these particular tensions. The introduction outlines the parameters of this study and explains the choice of texts. The first chapter reads Shakespeare's first dramatic poem, Venus and Adonis, as the playwright's call to Elizabethan England to abandon its emulation of classical Greek language and devolop its own instead. The second chapter focuses on The Comedy of Errors as a Shakespeareane xploration of England's effort to forge itself as different to both the Ottoman Empire and early modern Greece and its inability to achieve such a goal due to its confrontation with an Eastern `other' who is both a reflection of the self and determinately alien. This blurring of boundaries is further highlighted in A Midsummer Night's Dream. The play dramatises the dissolution of strict binary oppositions such as the Athenian city and the forest, the elevated classical Greece and the degraded early modem one, and the stereotypical differences between the two sexes by effeminating men and emasculating women. The fourth chapter analyzes Troilus and Cressida as a Shakespeareans atire of the breakdown of the classical world which disrupts the use of the Troy legend as a tool of political propaganda by both Elizabeth and James I. The last three plays of the thesis, written well into the Jacobean era, are analysed in relation to James's and Henry's courts. Timon of Athens satirizes the fall of the Athenian civilisation in order to critique Jacobean England and its decadent monarch. Pericles is read as a dramatisation of the dream of proto-capitalistic Jacobean England's redemption by its re-naissance of feudal values, its engagement in a war against the infidels and its solidification of a Christian Renaissance English identity. The seventh and last chapter examines The Two Noble Kinsmen as a call for Jacobean England to resuscitate its decayed chivalric ethos by abandoning its imitation of Greek antiquity and engaging in a more introspective process, a return to its Gothic origins.
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Gill, David. "Greek cult tables /." New York ; London : Garland, 1991. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb35698373x.

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Owen, Sara Susan. "A theory of Greek colonisation : EIA Thrace and initial Greek contacts." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1999. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/265444.

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The study of Greek colonisation is still dominated by Hellenocentric and Imperialist approaches. Furthermore, culture historical methodologies are still common. Studies often prioritise Imperialist readings of Greek literature, and even (as demonstrated here) restore fragments of Archilochos according to these assumptions. They also demonstrate a reified view of ethnicity, particularly in their adherence to the model of 'Hellenisation'. This thesis attacks the colonialist assumptions which pervade even the more theoretically sophisticated literature on the subject. Instead it attempts to provide a theoretically-informed account of the Greek settlement of Thrace, a region complicated by the presence of a divisive national frontier between Greece and Bulgaria. It rejects the Hellenocentric models and attempts to contextualise the first material evidence of Thracian contacts with Greeks. In so doing, thiss tudy demonstrates that first contacts with Greeks must be seen in the context of profound social (in which are embedded technological and economic) changes within Thrace which led to the active seeking out of exotic objects on the part of nascent elites. It does this through the media of studies on the adoption of iron, landscape, megaliths and burial in Early Iron Age Thrace, and a case study of burial, settlement and cult evidence from the island of Thasos. This thesistherefore has wider implications than just for the study of the Early Iron Age, or Greek 'colonisation' of this area. It demonstrates that the local social context is crucial to understanding the nature of the phenomenon of Greek colonisation. More than that, it demonstrates that the local context and local populations can no longer be seen as tabulae rasae for the imposition of Greek culture.
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Lymberis, Panagiotis. "Greek-Turkish crises since 1955 : implications for Greek-Turkish conflict management." Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/10945/8454.

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Past attempts to explain Greek-Turkish conflict have been built on two underlying themes. One theme focuses on incompatible Greek and Turkish interests while the other identifies cultural and social differences between the two countries as the primary causes for competition. Immediate causes for the conflict include issues ranging from domestic political considerations to the international setting. This thesis examines the 1955, 1963, 1967, 1974, 1976 and 1987 Greek-Turkish crises as it questions the primacy of underlying or immediate causes in Greek-Turkish conflict. After examining possible reasons for the failure of past mediations in resolving the underlying causes of the conflict, this thesis suggests that national interests as well as cultural realities from both sides of the Aegean have to be considered in any mediation attempt. Immediate causes do not seem critical for the evolution of the conflict even though they determine the development and outcome of particular crises. This thesis also recognizes, that successful resolution of Greek-Turkish differences will be of benefit not only to the two countries but to regional stability as well (Cyprus, Balkans, Southeastern Mediterranean). Organizations with which the two countries are associated, (NATO, EU, WEU) have only to gain from a Greek- Turkish rapprochement
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Books on the topic "Greek"

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Oswyn, Murray, ed. The Greeks and Greek civilization. London: HarperCollins, 1998.

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The Greeks and Greek civilization. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1998.

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Burckhardt, Jacob. The Greeks and Greek civilization. London: FontanaPress, 1998.

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Greek dictionary & phrasebook: Greek-English/English-Greek. New York: Hippocrene Books, 2012.

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A, Magazis George, ed. Langenscheidt's standard Greek dictionary: Greek-English, English-Greek. Maspeth, N.Y: Langenscheidt, 1990.

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A, Magazis George, ed. Langenscheidt's standard Greek dictionary: Greek-English,English-Greek. Berlin: Langenscheidt [distributor], 1990.

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Nathanail, Paul. Greek dictionary: Greek-English and English-Greek pocket dictionary. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1985.

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Hionides, Harry T. The Collins Greek pocket dictionary: Greek-English, English-Greek. London: Collins, 1988.

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Greek dictionary: Greek-English and English-Greek pocket dictionary. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1985.

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Oxford Greek minidictionary: Greek-English, English-Greek = Hellēnoangliko, Angloellēniko. 2nd ed. Oxford [England]: Oxford University Press, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Greek"

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Johnson, Scott Fitzgerald. "Greek." In A Companion to Late Antique Literature, 9–25. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118830390.ch1.

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Rubin, Aaron D., and Lily Kahn. "Greek." In Jewish Languages from A to Z, 59–63. New York : Routledge, [2021]: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351043441-14.

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Berkoff, Steven. "Greek." In A World Elsewhere, 93–98. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019. |: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429341144-18.

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Joseph, Brian D. "Greek." In The World's Major Languages, 357–82. Third edition. | Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, [2018] | “First edition published by Croom Helm 1987.”: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315644936-20.

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Knight, G. Wilson. "Greek." In The Golden Labyrinth, 3–19. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003258919-2.

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Austin, Scott. "The Greeks and Greek Issues." In Tao and Trinity, 30–45. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137498144_3.

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Zanetto, Giuseppe. "Greek Novel and Greek Archaic Literature." In A Companion to the Ancient Novel, 400–410. Oxford: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118350416.ch25.

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Makowski, John F. "Greek Love in the Greek Novel." In A Companion to the Ancient Novel, 490–501. Oxford: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118350416.ch31.

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Pavlidou, Theodossia-Soula. "Greek. Women, gender and Modern Greek." In Gender Across Languages, 175–99. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/impact.11.11pav.

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Funke, Peter. "Greek Amphiktyonies." In A Companion to Ancient Greek Government, 449–65. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118303214.ch29.

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Conference papers on the topic "Greek"

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Koutsikakis, John, Ilias Chalkidis, Prodromos Malakasiotis, and Ion Androutsopoulos. "GREEK-BERT: The Greeks visiting Sesame Street." In SETN 2020: 11th Hellenic Conference on Artificial Intelligence. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3411408.3411440.

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Polo, Olieta, and Manjola Sulaj. "THE GREEK RADIO PROGRAMS OF ETHNIC GREEK MINORITY IN ALBANIA." In The 5th Electronic International Interdisciplinary Conference. Publishing Society, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18638/eiic.2016.5.1.552.

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Loukina, Anastassia. "Acoustic model of stress in standard Greek and Greek dialects." In 2nd Tutorial and Research Workshop on Experimental Linguistics. ExLing Society, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36505/exling-2008/02/0038/000097.

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Sababa, Hanna, and Athena Stassopoulou. "A Classifier to Distinguish Between Cypriot Greek and Standard Modern Greek." In 2018 Fifth International Conference on Social Networks Analysis, Management and Security (SNAMS). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/snams.2018.8554709.

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Kleftodimos, Alexandros, Georgios Lappas, Amalia Triantafyllidou, and Anastasia Yannacopoulou. "Investigating the Greek political Twittersphere: Greek MPs and their Twitter network." In 2018 South-Eastern European Design Automation, Computer Engineering, Computer Networks and Society Media Conference (SEEDA_CECNSM). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/seeda-cecnsm.2018.8544945.

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Kermanidis, Katia, Manolis Maragoudakis, Nikos Fakotakis, and George Kokkinakis. "Learning Greek verb complements." In the 20th international conference. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/1220355.1220508.

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Makris, Dimos, Ioannis Karydis, and Spyros Sioutas. "The Greek Music Dataset." In the 16th International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2797143.2797175.

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Gessiou, Eleni, Alexandros Labrinidis, and Sotiris Ioannidis. "A Greek (privacy) tragedy." In the 8th ACM workshop. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1655188.1655203.

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Karpava, Sviatlana. "L2 Greek morphological agreement." In 4th Tutorial and Research Workshop on Experimental Linguistics. ExLing SocietyExLing 2011: Proceedings of 4th Tutorial and Research Workshop on Experimental Linguistics,, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36505/exling-2011/04/0021/000190.

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Athanasopoulou, Angeliki, and Irene Vogel. "Compounds in Modern Greek." In 169th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America. Acoustical Society of America, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/2.0000065.

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Reports on the topic "Greek"

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Gregory, Debra. The Preferred Learning Styles of Greek EFL Students and Greek EFL Teachers. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.6712.

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Harsawaskita, Adrianus. Greek lessons for ASEAN nations. Edited by Ria Ernunsari and Sara Phillips. Monash University, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54377/cda7-598f.

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House, Christopher, and Linda Tesar. Greek Budget Realities: No Easy Options. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, October 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w21688.

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Gourinchas, Pierre-Olivier, Thomas Philippon, and Dimitri Vayanos. The Analytics of the Greek Crisis. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, June 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w22370.

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Chodorow-Reich, Gabriel, Loukas Karabarbounis, and Rohan Kekre. The Macroeconomics of the Greek Depression. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, May 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w25900.

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Wisner, Robert J. The Classic Greek Ladder and Newton's Method. Washington, DC: The MAA Mathematical Sciences Digital Library, August 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4169/loci003330.

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Spinellis, D. Greek Character Encoding for Electronic Mail Messages. RFC Editor, May 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc1947.

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Franco, John, and John Franco. άέήίϊΐόύΰώθωερτψυιοπασδφγηςκλζχξωβνμ ΑΒΠΣΔΘΩΜ some greek letters in title. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), April 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1431341.

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Kayaoglu, Barin. Turkish-Greek standoff over Aegean islets continues. Al-Monitor: The Pulse of the Middle East, February 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.26598/auis_ug_is_2017_02_01.

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Naeve, Linda L., Raymond S. Hansen, Lester A. Wilson, Sabina Quint, and Leah B. Riesselman. Greek Oregano—A Niche Crop for Iowa? Ames: Iowa State University, Digital Repository, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/farmprogressreports-180814-1177.

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