Languages of Greece

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Languages of Greece
Official language(s) Greek
Sign language(s) Greek Sign Language
Common keyboard layout(s)
Greek keyboard
This 1896 calendar from Thessaloniki, Greece, is written in Ottoman Turkish, Armenian, Greek, Bulgarian, Ladino, and French.
This 1896 calendar from Thessaloniki, Greece, is written in Ottoman Turkish, Armenian, Greek, Bulgarian, Ladino, and French.

The official language of Greece is Greek. In addition, a number of non-official, minority languages and some Greek dialects are spoken as well.

Contents

[edit] Greek

Standard Greek is the only official language of the Hellenic Republic, and is spoken by some 99% of the population.[1] (though not necessarily as a first language). Modern Greek is the officially used standard, but there are several non-official dialects spoken as well.

The Greek island of Crete, home to Cretan, one of the largest spoken Greek dialects.
The Greek island of Crete, home to Cretan, one of the largest spoken Greek dialects.

[edit] Cretan

Cretan Greek is spoken by upwards of half a million people on the island of Crete, as well as in the Greek Diaspora. It is rarely used in written speech, and differs much less from Standard Greek than other dialects.

[edit] Pontic

The Pontic Greeks also have a distinct dialect, spoken by 200,000 in Greece.

[edit] Tsakonian

The little-spoken Tsakonian dialect is used by some in the Tsakonia region of Peloponnese. The dialect is split into three sub-dialects, Northern, Southern, and Propontis. The dialect is spoken by only 1,200 people.

The city of Ionnina.
The city of Ionnina.

[edit] Yevanic

A Jewish dialect of Greek spoken by the Romaniotes, Yevanic is almost completely extinct today. There are a total of roughly 50 speakers, around 35 of whom now reside in Israel. The language may still be used by some elderly Romaniotes in Ioannina.

[edit] Minority languages

[edit] Albanian

See also, Albanians in Greece.

Since the 1990s, large numbers of Albanian immigrants have arrived in Greece, forming the largest immigrant group (443,550 in the 2001 census [2])

[edit] Arvanitika

Unlike the recent immigrants from Albania, the Arvanites are a centuries-old local Albanian-speaking community in parts of Greece, especially in the south. Their language, now in danger of extinction, is known as Arvanitika. They are fully integrated into Greek society and are considered ethnic Greeks, not Albanians. Their number has been estimated to between 30,000 and 140,000.

[edit] Cham

The Cham Albanians were a mainly Muslim Albanian group who traditionally lived in Epirus, in northern Greece. Most of them were expelled during the Second World War. Some have returned after the opening of the Albanian borders.

The distribution of Romanians and Vlachs in the Balkans (Aromanians marked in red).
The distribution of Romanians and Vlachs in the Balkans (Aromanians marked in red).

[edit] Aromanian

See also, Aromanians in Greece.

The Aromanians, also known as Vlachs, are a population group linguistically related to Romanians. The Aromanian language, an Eastern Romance language, is spoken by the some 40,000 Aromanians in Greece.

[edit] Slavic

For more details on this topic, see Slavic language (Greece).

In Greece, although groups may be considered to be speaking dialects heteronomous with standard Macedonian Slavic, they do not all identify their language with their national identity. A slavic dialect is the mother tongue of 41,017 (1951 census) Greek citizens (most of them bilingual) of Macedonia. This Slavic speaking minority in Greece varies on how it describes its language - most describe it as Slavic and proclaim a Greek national identity, although there are smaller groups, some of which describe it as Macedonian and espouse an ethnic Macedonian national identity, and some who describe it as Bulgarian and espouse a Bulgarian national identity [3]. Some prefer to identify as dopii and their dialect as dopia which mean local or indigenous in Greek . Ethnologue estimates 180,000 Slavic speakers [4], primarily in the Western Macedonia area.

[edit] Bulgarian

There are an estimated 30,000 native speakers of the Bulgarian language in northern Greece, according to Ethnologue, mainly in the Western Thrace area [5]. It is spoken by the Pomaks, a Bulgarian people who are Muslim by faith.

[edit] Armenian

See also, Armenian Diaspora.

Of the 35,000 Armenians in Greece today, some 20,000 speak the language.

[edit] Romani

In the population of 200,000 to 300,000 Roma, or Gypsy, people in Greece today, the Romani language is spoken widely. Romani is an Indo-Aryan language similar to many Indian languages, due to the origins of the Roma people in northern India. The dialect spoken in Greece (as well as in Bulgaria, Albania, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Serbia, Romania, parts of Turkey, and Ukraine) is known as Balkan Romani. There are 160,000 Romani speakers in Greece today (90% of the Roma population).[6]

[edit] Turkish

Turkish is one of the most widely spoken minority languages in Greece today, with a speaker population of 128,380 people[7]. Traditionally, there were many more Turkish speakers in Greece, due to the long period of rule by the Ottoman Empire, but after the exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey, a much smaller number remain. The Turkish-speaking population of Greece is mainly concentrated in the regions of Thrace and Aegean. Turkish speakers also make up a large part of Greece's Muslim minority.

[edit] Ladino

Ladino, the Judeo-Spanish language, was traditionally spoken by the Sephardic community in Greece, particularly in the city of Thessaloniki, where, at their peak percentage, they made up 56% of the population.[8] However, many of Greece's Jews were murdered in the Second World War, and a large number emigrated to Israel after 1948. It is maintained today by between 2,000 and 8,000 people in Greece.

[edit] References

This article contains material from the CIA World Factbook (2006 edition) which, as a US government publication, is in the public domain.

Languages