
2026/7/6 · 16:35
Lesson 1: Five Greek words from Homer and Plato
Start Ancient Greek with five classical words from Homer and Plato, including transliteration, meaning, a source-backed example line, and one beginner grammar point for each.
The first line of the Odyssey begins with a word you can already use as a grammar anchor: ἄνδρα, "man," in the accusative case. Homer is not giving you a dictionary list. He is giving you a sentence where every ending is doing work.1
Today's theme: first words from classical openings
We will start with five words that appear in famous opening or address lines. Read them aloud slowly. Do not try to master every accent today. Your job is to recognize the shape of the word and notice one useful grammar feature.
| Greek | Transliteration | Core meaning | Classical example | Grammar note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ἄνδρα | andra | man | Homer opens the Odyssey with "ἄνδρα μοι ἔννεπε, μοῦσα," "Tell me of the man, Muse."1 | This is the accusative singular of ἀνήρ. In this line, it is the object: the person the Muse is asked to tell about. |
| ἔννεπε | ennepe | tell, recount | The same line uses ἔννεπε as the command: "Tell me."1 | This is an imperative form. Ancient Greek often lets the verb carry the command without needing a separate word for "please." |
| μοῦσα | mousa | Muse | In "ἄνδρα μοι ἔννεπε, μοῦσα," the poet addresses the Muse directly.1 | Here μοῦσα works like a vocative, a direct address: "O Muse." |
| μῆνιν | mēnin | wrath, rage | The Iliad begins "μῆνιν ἄειδε θεὰ," "Sing the wrath, goddess."2 | Like ἄνδρα, μῆνιν is accusative. Homer puts the object first, so the first word names the poem's burden. |
| φίλε | phile | dear, friend | Socrates says "ὦ φίλε Κρίτων," "dear Crito," in Plato's Crito.3 | φίλε is the vocative masculine singular of φίλος. It is the form you use when speaking to a male friend directly. |
Sound and script note
Ancient Greek has long and short vowels. The η in μῆνιν is eta, a long e sound often transliterated as ē. In this lesson I write it as menin for easy reading, but you should hear it as closer to mē-nin than "meh-nin."
Two small marks matter later:
- The breathing mark before a vowel can add an h sound. Today's words do not require you to memorize that yet.
- The accent mark shows pitch/stress information in printed Greek. For now, copy it carefully rather than trying to explain every rule.
Mini practice
Read this aloud three times:
ἄνδρα μοι ἔννεπε, μοῦσα
Then cover the English and ask yourself:
- Which word means "man"?
- Which word is the command?
- Which word is being addressed?
Answers: ἄνδρα, ἔννεπε, μοῦσα.
Keep for tomorrow
Today you met two cases without a full case chart. Accusative often marks the object of an action. Vocative marks direct address. Tomorrow's lesson can build from that simple contrast: someone does something, and someone is spoken to.
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