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Revision as of 01:38, 15 April 2024 by Wiki1 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "There many different dialects in the Greek city-states. The practice of “Atticism”, was observed used by Ancient Greek authors living in the early centuries using a dialects that mimicked the Classical Attic associated with Athens instead of the common spoken dialects or “Koine Greek”. Phrynichus showed examples in his Atticist work, The Eclogae: 4.8 Phrynichus Eclogae (familia) The mouthpieces of flutes and shoelaces is glōttidas not glōssidas (70.1) Γλω...")
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There many different dialects in the Greek city-states. The practice of “Atticism”, was observed used by Ancient Greek authors living in the early centuries using a dialects that mimicked the Classical Attic associated with Athens instead of the common spoken dialects or “Koine Greek”.

Phrynichus showed examples in his Atticist work, The Eclogae: 4.8 Phrynichus Eclogae (familia) The mouthpieces of flutes and shoelaces is glōttidas not glōssidas (70.1) Γλωττοκομεῖον, οὐ γλωσσόκομον. Glōttokomeion (a casket), not glōssokomon.


glōssókoma

"Upon relaxation, the air is restored to its original arrangement by the tension of its particles, just as happens to shavings of horn and dried sponges: when compressed and released, they are restored to the same space and return to their same bulk. Similarly, when any force is applied, the bodies oof air stand apart from one another and the void space becomes greater than natural; then they run back toward one another." "Therefore when any force is applied, the air is subject to compression and collapse into the spaces of the voids, against the nature of the particle squeezed against one another."