Abarim Publications: Is "uncovering his feet" a euphemism? Did Naomi tell Ruth to seduce Boaz? This article says no. The website features lengthy articles on Hebrew and Greek words and names. Not sure how reliable it is, but worth bookmarking....
Posted by Michael Bates on June 7, 2022 10:27 AM
THE PRONUNCIATION OF LATIN: Ancient and Modern Pronunciations "A great deal of heat, if not light, has been spent on the problem of the "correct pronunciation of Latin". Probably most students will go with the method that their teachers use,...
Posted by Michael Bates on September 15, 2017 1:38 PM
ΕταιÏεία Ελληνικών ΤυπογÏαφικών Στοιχείων :: Greek Font Society :: Typefaces Home page to their list of Greek typefaces from the earliest days of printing to modern times, organized in pages by century....
Posted by Michael Bates on November 25, 2012 11:54 PM
[Stoa Consortium] Unicode Polytonic Greek for the World Wide Web (UPGW3) A list of Unicode Ancient Greek fonts for use on the web....
Posted by Michael Bates on November 25, 2012 11:49 PM
Unicode fonts for Ancient Greek A list of links to Ancient Greek Unicode fonts....
Posted by Michael Bates on November 25, 2012 11:44 PM
Aristarcoj Download The Aristarcoj font by Russell Cottrell -- a very attractive ancient Greek Unicode font....
Posted by Michael Bates on November 25, 2012 11:34 PM
Installing the classical Greek keyboard How to type Greek on a Windows XP computer....
Posted by Michael Bates on August 29, 2012 11:44 PM
Typing in Greek An illustrated guide, in PDF format, to typing accented Greek in Microsoft Windows. Nice table showing the key combinations for each combination of diacritical marks....
Posted by Michael Bates on August 16, 2012 1:24 AM
Polytonic Greek Unicode Keyboards A comparison of a third-party keyboard layout for Windows (EZAccent) and native Windows support for typing polytonic (accented) Greek. Plus how to type in Greek on Apple products....
Posted by Michael Bates on August 16, 2012 1:21 AM
Dr. Weevil: Rhinoceri? No, the plural of rhinoceros is rhinocerotes, and the plural of octopus is not octopi but octopodes. One apparatus, two apparatus, but if there's more than one, and you're being excruciatingly correct, you should pronounce it appara-toose,...
Posted by Michael Bates on August 20, 2008 10:26 PM
If you use an RSS reader, you can subscribe to a feed of all future entries tagged 'Greek'. [What is this?]