Ancient Greek has no consonant that makes the Y sound, similar to the Latin consonantal I in words like , , but it was part of Indo-European phonology, and it left detectable marks. The *y progressive marker has several manifestations, of which this chart is an incomplete overview:
Dentals
+ Y =
ζ
Velar/Palatals
+ Y =
ττ- /σσ-
Labials
+ Y =
πτ-
ν
+ Y =
ιν
ρ
+ Y =
ιρ
STEM
MARKER
PROGRESSIVE
AORIST
θαυματ-
Y
ἐθαύμασα
ἐλπίδ-
Y
ἤλπισα
ἅλ-
Y
ἡλόμη
πραγ-
Y
/ πράττω
ἔπρᾱξα
ταραχ-
Y
/ ταράττω
ἐτάραξα
ταγ-
Y
/ τάττω
ἔταξα
τεν-
Y
τενῶ
χαρ-
Y
ἐχάρην
βλαβ-
y
ἔβλαβον
καλυβ-
y
ἐκάλυψα
κλεπ-
y
ἔκλεψα
σκεπ-
y
ἐσκεψάμην
ἅφ-
y
ἧψα
θαφ-
y
ἔθαψα
“The I Class”, in Curtius, Georg. The Greek Verb: Its Structure and Development. Translated by Augustus S Wilkins and E. B England. London: J. Murray, 1880.
Ancient Greek often adds an N in the progressive forms of verbs. So often, in fact, that the most common verbs have N added TWICE into the stem. Note that a N in Ancient Greek often expands to αν
STEM/ROOT
MARKER
PROGRESSIVE
AORIST
ταμ-
ν
ἔταμον
αἰσθ-
ν
ᾐσθόμην
δακ-
ν
ἔδακον
ἱκ-
ν
,
ἱκόμην
κυ-
ν
ἔκυσα
STEM/ROOT
MARKER
PROGRESSIVE
AORIST
λαβ-
2ν
ἔλαβον
λαθ-
2ν
ἔλαθον
μαθ-
2ν
ἔμαθον
τυχ-
2ν
ἔτυχον
πυθ-
2ν
ἐπυθόμην
λαχ-
2ν
ἔλαχον
αὐξ-
2ν
ηὖξον
See in Curtius, Georg. The Greek Verb: Its Structure and Development. Translated by Augustus S Wilkins and E. B England. London: J. Murray, 1880. in Kühner, Raphael. Ausführliche Grammatik Der Griechischen Sprache. Edited by Friedrich Blass and Bernhard Gerth. 3. Aufl. ed. Hannover: Hahnsche Buchhandlung, 1890, vol 1 part 2, p. 173
E Progressive Marker
Ancient Greek progressive forms will sometimes add an E into the vowel of the root. The first four verbs in the following list lengthen the vowel with an epsilon in the progressive forms. In an unrelated phenomenon, Ancient Greek will sometimes add an epsilon at the end of the root in the progressive forms. Many verbs have two progressive forms in Homer and other poets, one with and without the added epsilon, such as κυρέω and κύρω, ξύρω and ξυρέω, αἰδέομαι and αἴδομαι.
STEM/ROOT
MARKER
PROGRESSIVE
AORIST
λιπ-
ε
ἔλιπον
φυγ-
ε
ἔφυγον
πιθ-
ε
ἔπιθον
στιχ-
ε
ἔστιχον
δοκ-
ε
ἔδοξα
γαμ-
ε
ἔγημα
“Stems Which Lengthen the Vowel in the Present”, in Curtius, Georg. The Greek Verb: Its Structure and Development. Translated by Augustus S Wilkins and E. B England. London: J. Murray, 1880. “The E-Class and the Related Formations”, in Curtius, Georg. The Greek Verb: Its Structure and Development. Translated by Augustus S Wilkins and E. B England. London: J. Murray, 1880. „Verben, deren reinem Stamme im Praes. und Impf. ε zugefuegt ist“, in Kühner, Raphael. Ausführliche Grammatik Der Griechischen Sprache. Edited by Friedrich Blass and Bernhard Gerth. 3. Aufl. ed. Hannover: Hahnsche Buchhandlung, 1890, vol 1 part 2, p. 179
T Progressive Marker
Some Ancient Greek verbs have a tau added to the root in the progressive tenses. Most of these are best understood as a reflex of roots ending in a labial plus the yod/iota progressive marker.
Obsolete: “The T-Class”, in Curtius, Georg. The Greek Verb: Its Structure and Development. Translated by Augustus S Wilkins and E. B England. London: J. Murray, 1880.
Reduplication
Reduplication is a hallmark of the perfect aspect system in both Latin and Ancient Greek, but some Ancient Greek verbs reduplicate the root in the progressive tenses. Reduplication can cause a lot of sound changes, including loss of aspiration, or loss of a vowel.
STEM/ROOT
MARKER
PROGRESSIVE
AORIST
δρα-
δι
ἀπέδραν
δυ-
δι
ἔδυσα
γνω-
γι
ἔγνων
γεν-
γι
ἐγενόμην
βρω-
βι
ἔβρων
τειν-
τι
ἐτεινάμην
δά-
δι
ἐδίδαξα
μνα-
μι
ἔμνησα
Curtius, Georg. The Greek Verb: Its Structure and Development. Translated by Augustus S Wilkins and E. B England. London: J. Murray, 1880, Kühner, Raphael. Ausführliche Grammatik Der Griechischen Sprache. Edited by Friedrich Blass and Bernhard Gerth. 3. Aufl. ed. Hannover: Hahnsche Buchhandlung, 1890,