
2026. 7. 6. · 16:46
Lesson 2: Eta, Epsilon, Omicron, Omega, and Breathing Marks
Learn how Ancient Greek marks short and long e and o sounds, then practice breathing marks with short examples from Homer and Plato.
The word μῆνιν is not just a new vocabulary item. Its first vowel is doing visible sound work: η is eta, the long e-letter. That is why a careful beginner should read μῆνιν closer to mē-nin than men-in.1
Today's sound targets
Ancient Greek does not make you guess every e and o length. Smyth's grammar gives the beginner rule clearly: ε and ο are always short, while η and ω are always long.1
| Letter | Name | Beginner sound clue | Watch it in |
|---|---|---|---|
| ε | epsilon | short e | ἔννεπε, "tell" |
| η | eta | long e, often written ē | μῆνιν, "wrath" |
| ο | omicron | short o | πολύτροπον, "of many turns" |
| ω | omega | long o, often written ō | ὦ, "O!" in direct address |
Do not worry yet about reconstructing the exact ancient sound. For this stage, the useful habit is simpler: when you see η or ω, slow down. They are the long partners of ε and ο.
Example 1: Homer makes eta visible
Homer's Iliad opens with:
μῆνιν ἄειδε θεὰ Πηληϊάδεω Ἀχιλῆος
The first word, μῆνιν, was introduced in Lesson 1 as "wrath." In this line it begins with η, so the transliteration mēnin marks a long e sound.2
Now compare a word from the Odyssey opening:
ἄνδρα μοι ἔννεπε, μοῦσα
The command ἔννεπε, "tell," starts with ε. That is epsilon, the short e-letter.3
A practical reading contrast:
- μῆνιν: mē-nin, with eta held longer.
- ἔννεπε: en-ne-pe, with short epsilon sounds.
Example 2: Plato shows breathing marks
Every Greek word that begins with a vowel or diphthong carries either a rough breathing or a smooth breathing. Rough breathing adds an h sound before the vowel; smooth breathing is not sounded.1
Plato's Apology begins:
ὅτι μὲν ὑμεῖς, ὦ ἄνδρες Ἀθηναῖοι
This short phrase is a good breathing-mark drill because it gives you several initial vowels at once.4
| Form | What to notice | Beginner pronunciation clue |
|---|---|---|
| ὅτι | rough breathing over ο | starts h-like: hoti |
| ὑμεῖς | rough breathing over υ | starts h-like: hymeis |
| ὦ | smooth breathing over ω | no h: ō |
| ἄνδρες | smooth breathing over α | no h: andres |
The mark is small, but it changes the beginning of the word. ὦ ἄνδρες means "O men" or "gentlemen" in direct address; neither word begins with h. ὅτι and ὑμεῖς do begin with rough breathing.
Mini practice
Read these pairs aloud, slowly:
- ε / η: ἔννεπε, μῆνιν
- ο / ω: πολύτροπον, ὦ
- smooth / rough breathing: ἄνδρες, ὅτι
Then cover the explanations and answer:
- Which two letters are always long in today's lesson?
- Which mark adds an h sound?
- In ὦ ἄνδρες, do you pronounce an initial h?
Answers: η and ω; rough breathing; no.
Keep for tomorrow
Today was not about memorizing a whole alphabet chart. It was about seeing three signals inside real words: long e, long o, and initial h. Tomorrow, those signals will make case endings and address forms easier to hear, not just easier to spell.
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