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  1. Many local variants of the Greek alphabet were employed in ancient Greece during the archaic and early classical periods, until around 400 BC, when they were replaced by the classical 24-letter alphabet that is the standard today. All forms of the Greek alphabet were originally based on the shared inventory of the 22 symbols of the Phoenician ...

  2. S. Semonides of Amorgos. Simonides of Ceos. Categories: Ancient Greek poets by dialect. Ionic Greek writers. Automatic category TOC generates no TOC.

  3. Indica. (Arrian) Alexander the Great in battle against the Persian King Darius ( Pompejan mosaic, probably after a lost painting from the 3rd century BCE, not from Indica by Arrian.) Indica ( Ancient Greek: Ἰνδική Indikḗ) is the name of a short military history about interior Asia, particularly India, written by Arrian in the 2nd ...

  4. There’s a good article on Wikipedia, with examples. But be aware that Homer is not really Ionic. Homer’s dialect was an artificial mixture of Ionic, Aeolic, and Attic. The Attic bits are possibly a later intrusion - mostly they could be replaced with an Aeolic or Ionic equivalent. The earliest dialect may have been Aeolic.

  5. Ancient Greek temple. The Parthenon, on the Acropolis of Athens, Greece. The Caryatid porch of the Erechtheion in Athens. Greek temples ( Ancient Greek: ναός, romanized : naós, lit. 'dwelling', semantically distinct from Latin templum, "temple") were structures built to house deity statues within Greek sanctuaries in ancient Greek religion.

  6. Ancient Greek phonology is the reconstructed phonology or pronunciation of Ancient Greek. This article mostly deals with the pronunciation of the standard Attic dialect of the fifth century BC, used by Plato and other Classical Greek writers, and touches on other dialects spoken at the same time or earlier.

  7. Ionic. Arcadocypriot, or southern Achaean, was an ancient Greek dialect spoken in Arcadia in the central Peloponnese and in Cyprus. Its resemblance to Mycenaean Greek, as it is known from the Linear B corpus, suggests that Arcadocypriot is its descendant. In Cyprus the dialect was written using solely the Cypriot syllabary.