Ancient Greek nouns


In Ancient Greek, all nouns are classified according to grammatical gender. According to their function in a sentence, their form changes to one of the five cases. The set of forms that a noun will take for each case and number is determined by the declension that it follows.

Cases

The five cases of Ancient Greek each have different functions.

Nominative

The Ancient Greek nominative, like the Proto-Indo-European nominative, is used for the subject and for things describing the subject :
The vocative is used for addressing people or things. It is frequently the same as the nominative in the singular and always the same in the plural.
The accusative is used for the object of a verb, and also after prepositions. After prepositions it is often used for the destination of motion:
The Ancient Greek genitive can often be translated with the preposition "of" or the English possessive case:
It is also used after prepositions, especially those which mean "from":
The Ancient Greek dative corresponds to the Proto-Indo-European dative, instrumental, or locative. When it corresponds to the dative, it expresses the person or thing that is indirectly affected by an action, and can often be translated with the prepositions "to" or "for":
When the dative corresponds to the Proto-Indo-European instrumental, it expresses the thing with which something is done, and can often be translated by the preposition "with":
When the dative corresponds to the Proto-Indo-European locative case, it expresses location or time, and can often be translated by "in", "at", or "on":
The dative is also frequently used after prepositions, such as ἐν "in":

Accent of strong and weak cases

For first- and second-declension nouns accented on the ultima and third-declension nouns with a single-syllable stem, the strong cases have one type of accent, and the weak cases have another.
Specifically, the first- and second-declension nouns have acute in the strong cases, but circumflex in the weak cases. Third-declension nouns have the accent on the stem in the strong cases, but the ending in the weak cases.
Both of these patterns can be summarized by a single rule suggested by Paul Kiparsky: pre-ending accent in the strong cases and post-stem accent in the weak cases.
For first- and second-declension nouns, Kiparsky's rule is more complex. The thematic vowel counts as neither stem nor ending, but alternates between the two depending on which accent is considered. For post-stem accent, it counts as part of the ending; for pre-ending accent, it counts as part of the stem.

First declension

The first declension or alpha declension is considered thematic, with long alpha at the end of the stem, though it is derived from original athematic Indo-European forms. In Attic Greek, this changes to η everywhere except after ε, ι or ρ. The first declension includes mostly feminine nouns, but also a few masculine nouns, including agent nouns in -της, patronyms in -ίδης, and demonyms.
The first-declension genitive plural always takes a circumflex on the last syllable. In Homeric Greek the ending was -άων or -έων. -έων was contracted to -ῶν in Attic.

Feminine long a-stem

Feminine short a-stem

Some nouns have short ᾰ in the nominative, vocative and accusative singular, but are otherwise identical to other feminine first-declension nouns. They are recessively accented.
Most nouns in this category were formed with the suffix . The undergoes one of several sound changes with the consonant at the end of the stem:
Masculine first-declension nouns end in -ᾱς or -ης in Attic. Homer retains the older masculine ending -ᾱ and uses ναύτᾱ "sailor" instead of ναύτης: compare Latin nauta.
The masculine genitive singular ending comes from the second declension. Homeric Greek uses -ᾱο or -εω.

Second declension

The second or omicron declension is thematic, with an -ο or -ε at the end of the stem. It includes one class of masculine and feminine nouns and one class of neuter nouns.
When a second-declension noun is accented on the ultima, the accent switches between acute for the nominative, accusative, and vocative, and circumflex for the genitive and dative. The only exceptions are Attic-declension and contracted nouns.

Masculine and feminine o-stems

Masculine and feminine both end in -ος, and can only be distinguished by an article or adjective.

Neuter o-stems

In the neuter, the nominative, vocative and accusative are the same, with a singular in -ον and plural in -ᾰ. Other forms are identical to the masculine and feminine second declension.

Attic declension

In the Attic dialect, some masculine second-declension nouns and some adjectives have endings with lengthened vowels. Some nouns in this category end in -εως, which developed from an original *-ηος by the process of quantitative metathesis. All second-declension endings containing ο were transformed:
The placement of the accent does not change, even when the ultima is long, and all forms take an acute instead of a circumflex.
In these nouns, the vocative singular, nominative singular, and accusative plural are identical, as are the accusative singular and genitive plural, and the dative singular and nominative and vocative plural.

Contracted second declension

In Attic, nouns and adjectives ending in -εος or -οος and -εον or -οον are contracted so that they end in -ους and -ουν.
When the ultima is accented, it takes a circumflex in all forms, including the nominative, accusative, and vocative.

Third declension

The third declension group includes masculine, feminine and neuter nouns. It is an athematic declension that lacks the standard thematic vowels of the two thematic declensions above. This results in varied and often complex phonemic interactions between stem and ending, especially so between adjacent consonants, that often make these nouns appear to be highly irregular compared to their straightforward thematic counterparts.
These nouns in the nominative singular end with the vowels α, ι, υ, ω or with the consonants ν, ρ, ς. They form the genitive case with -ος, -ως or -ους.
Third-declension nouns have one, two, or three stems, unlike first- and second-declension nouns, which always have only one stem. Each stem is used in different case-and-number forms. In nouns with two stems, the stem with the long vowel is called the strong stem, while the stem with the short vowel is called the weak stem. The strong stem is found at the nominative singular, and the weak stem in the genitive singular.
The masculine and feminine nominative singular ordinarily ends in -ς, but has no ending in some nouns whose stems end in -ν- and -ντ-, and all nouns in -ρ: ἡγεμών, ἀκτίς, γέρων, γίγας, ῥήτωρ. The neuter nominative, accusative, and vocative singular always has no ending.
The α of the accusative singular and plural was originally a syllabic ν. The accusative singular ending -α appears after Proto-Greek consonants, and is much more common than -ν, because almost all third-declension stems end in a consonant. When a Proto-Greek consonant was lost, -α appears after a vowel, and may be lengthened to ᾱ: βασιλέᾱ. The ending ν appears after the vowels υ and ι: ἰσχύν, πόλιν. The ending -νς always changes to -ας, except in the accusative plural of ἰχθύς, where it lengthens the preceding υ by compensatory lengthening, yielding ἰχθῦς.

Consonant-stems

These nouns end in -ν, -ρ, -ς. Based on the last letter of the stem, they are divided into two categories:
The mute-stem nouns have stems ending in -κ-, -γ-, -χ-, -π-, -β-, -φ-, -τ-, -δ-, -θ-.
The semi mute-stem nouns have stems ending in -ν-, -λ-, -ρ-, -σ-.
Nominative singular -ς and dative plural -σι cause pronunciation or spelling changes, depending on the consonant at the end of the stem.
consonant
at end of
stem
nominative
singular,
dative
plural
-ς, -σι
velarκ, γ, χ-ξ, -ξι
labialπ, β, φ-ψ, -ψι
Velar- and labial-stems
In the nominative singular and dative plural, the velars κ, γ, χ combined with σ are written as ξ, and the labials π, β, φ combined with σ are written as ψ.
Dental- and nasal-stems
Stems in t
In the nominative singular and dative plural, a dental τ, δ, θ before σ is lost: τάπης, not τάπητς.
If a noun is not accented on the last syllable and ends in -ις, -ης, or -υς, it often has an accusative singular in -ν and a vocative with no ending.
In the nominative singular and dative plural, ντ before σ is lost, and the previous vowel is lengthened by compensatory lengthening. In the vocative singular, final -τ is lost, as Ancient Greek words cannot end in stops.
When a noun is accented on the last syllable, the vocative singular is identical to the nominative:
These nouns have a weak stem in -οντ- and a strong stem in -ωντ-. The strong stem is used only in the nominative singular. The vocative singular is the weak stem without an ending. In both the nominative and vocative singular, the final τ disappears. In the dative plural, the σ in the ending causes the ντ to disappear, and the ο is lengthened to ου by compensatory lengthening.
Stems in at
In these nouns, the stem originally ended in -ν̥τ-, which changed to -ατ- in Greek. In the nominative singular, the final -τ disappeared.
Single-stems in an, en, in, on
Some nouns have stems ending in -ν-. The nominative singular may end in -ς, causing compensatory lengthening, or have no ending.
Double-stems in en, on
Some nouns have a strong stem in -ην-, -ων- and a weak stem in -εν-, -ον-. The nominative singular is the only form with the strong stem. Nouns of this class that are not accented on the last syllable use the weak stem without an ending for the vocative singular.
Liquid-stems have stems ending in -λ- or -ρ-. Unlike mute-stems, these nouns do not change in spelling or pronunciation when the dative plural ending -σι is added.
Single-stems in er, or
Some nouns end in -ηρ, -ωρ and take the endings without any sound changes.
Double-stems in er, or
Some nouns have a nominative singular in -ηρ, -ωρ. The stem for the rest of the forms ends in -ερ-, -ορ-.
Nouns in this class that are not accented on the last syllable use the weak stem without an ending for the vocative singular.
Triple-stems in er
Some nouns have a strong stem in -ηρ in the nominative singular, a middle stem in -ερ- in other forms, and a weak stem in -ρ- in yet other forms. The α in the dative plural was added for ease of pronunciation; the original form ended in -ρσι.
These include ὁ πατήρ "father", ἡ μήτηρ "mother", ἡ θυγάτηρ "daughter", ἡ γαστήρ "stomach", ἡ Δημήτηρ "Demeter", ὁ ἀνήρ "man".
The first three and γαστήρ use the weak stem in the genitive and dative singular and in the dative plural. The rest use the weak stem in the genitive, dative, and accusative singular and in the plural.
The vocative singular is usually the middle stem without an ending and accent on the first syllable.
S-stems
Nouns in all three genders have stems ending in -εσ- or -οσ-. But in most cases, the σ was lost after being debuccalized to, so for the most part the stems appear to actually end in. In Attic, but not Ionic, the ε or ο is contracted with the vowel of the ending. When σ combines with the -σι of the dative plural, the double σσ is simplified to single σ.
Masculines in es
There are several masculine proper names with nominative singulars in -ης and stems in -εσ-. The vocative singular is the bare stem without an ending.

Socrates
nominativeΣωκράτης
vocativeΣώκρατες
accusativeΣωκράτη
genitiveΣωκράτους
dativeΣωκράτει
Feminines in os
There are a few feminines with nominative singulars in -ως and stems in -οσ-.

shame
nominative-vocativeαἰδώς
accusativeαἰδῶ
genitiveαἰδοῦς
dativeαἰδοῖ
Neuters in es
Some neuter nouns have nominative, accusative, and vocative singulars in -ος, and stems in -εσ-.

Vowel-stems

These nouns end with ι, υ, ευ, αυ, ου, ω.
Stems in long o
These take the endings without sound changes.
Single-stems in u
Because these nouns have a stem ending in -υ-, the accusative singular appears as -υν rather than -υα, and the accusative plural changes by compensatory lengthening from -υνς to -ῡς.
Triple-stems in i or u
There are many feminine nouns in -ις, and a few masculine nouns in -υς, and one neuter noun: ἄστυ "town".
One stem is in -ι- or -υ-, another is in -ει- or -ευ-, and a third is in -ηι- or -ηυ-. But these stems underwent sound changes, so that they are no longer obvious. Before a vowel, the ι or υ in the second and third stem became the semivowel ι̯ or ϝ, and was lost. The long-vowel stem in the genitive singular was shortened, and the vowel in the ending lengthened. Therefore, there appear to be two stems, ending in ι/υ and ε.
Stems in eu, au, ou
The nouns in -ευς have two stems: one with short ε, another with long η. Both originally ended with digamma, which by the time of Classical Greek had either vanished or changed to υ. Thus the stems end in -ε-, from *-εϝ-, and -η-, from *-ηϝ-. In Attic Greek the η of the stem underwent quantitative metathesis with the vowel of the ending—the switching of their lengths. This is the origin of the -ως, -ᾱ, and ᾱς of the forms based on the stem in -η-.
The nouns with a vowel before the -εύς often contract the final ε of the stem, which disappears into the following ω and ᾱ of the genitive and accusative singular and plural. As is the rule, the vowel resulting from contraction takes a circumflex:
Stems in -οι- end in -ω in the nominative singular. The ι becomes the semivowel ι̯ and is lost, except in the vocative singular. There are no plural forms; when the plural does appear, it follows the second declension. The rest of the cases are formed by contraction.
feminine
ἠχω-, ἠχο-
"echo"
nominative-accusativeἠχώ
vocativeἠχοῖ
genitiveἠχοῦς
dativeἠχοῖ

Derivation

Diminutive suffixes

New nouns may be formed by suffix addition. Sometimes suffixes are added on top of each other: