Greek, an independent branch of the Indo-European family of languages, is the language of the Greeks. The Greek alphabet is a set of twenty-four letters that has been used to write the Greek language since the late 9th or early 8th century BCE. It is the first and oldest alphabet in the narrow sense that it notes each vowel and consonant with a separate symbol. The Greek alphabet has been in continuous use for the past 2,750 years or so since about 750 BC. It was developed from the Canaanite/Phoenician alphabet and the order and names of the letters are derived from Phoenician. The original Canaanite meanings of the letter names was lost when the alphabet was adapted for Greek.
The name of the greek writing system is Cuniform.
Crete was part of Ancient Greece. The Cretian writing system was called Cypriot syllabary. This was a local type of Greek writing.
It was the first system of characters for phoenetic writing, on which Greek, Latin and modern European writing developed.
It is very true!
Hellen influenced the greek language and writing system for she showed the king at that time the writing system of the persians.
The Greek alphabet was likely developed around the 8th century BCE to create a standardized writing system for the Greek language. This new system made it easier to record information, communicate, and preserve Greek literature and culture.
The Greeks primarily used two writing systems: the older system known as Linear B, which was used for Mycenaean Greek from the 14th to the 12th century BCE, and the later system known as the Greek alphabet, which was developed around the 8th century BCE and is still used today for writing Greek. Linear B was primarily used for administrative and economic purposes, while the Greek alphabet became the primary script for literary and everyday writing.
Yes, and their alphabet formed the basis of the Greek and Roman alphabets and today's alphabets.
The alphabetic writing system, copied by Greek, Roman and modern European languages.
The Greek alphabet which was derived from the Phoenician one.
true
Yes. Our alphabet is quite similar to the greek alphabet. In fact, the word Alphabet comes from "Alpha" and "Beta", the first two letters of the greek alphabet.