Ancient Greek:Glossing recommendations
From Glossing Ancient Languages
Extra Glossing transcription line
Readers outside the field of Classics cannot be expected to be able to read Ancient Greek letters. Anyhow, it is good common practice to translate all not latin-based script systems into latin-based transliterations or transcriptions. Standards to transcribe Ancient Greek are already established. The encoder shall add the transcription in an an extra ‘Glossing transcription line’ between the original Greek line and the Glossing line.
- Example (Paus. 2.34)
Greek | πῦρ | ἀναζέσαι | πολὺ | ἐκ | τῆς | γῆς |
Glossing transcription | pýr | anazésai | polý | ek | tḗs | gḗs |
Glosses | fire(N)[SG.NOM] | boil_up:AOR.INF | much:N.SG.NOM | ELAT | DEF.F.SG.GEN | earth(F):SG.GEN |
But there is also another issue.
In traditional philological editions of manuscripts use a system of punctuation (cf. the Leiden Conventions) which is partially in conflict with the punctuation as defined by the Glossing Rules.
Compare the following table:
Puctuation | Meaning in philological editions |
Meaning in Glossing transcription line |
Meaning in Glossing line |
---|---|---|---|
< > | Emendation of a scribal error (addition) | Infix | |
{ } | Emendation of a scribal error (deletion) | — | |
[ ] | Completely destroyed text (lacuna), potentially with reconstructed content |
— | ‘Zero’ morpheme |
[[ ]] | Deleted text | — | |
( ) | Non-overt part of an abbreviation | — | Inherent category |
dot below (e.g. ọ) |
Damaged or unclear characters | — | |
\ | Addition/insertion above the line (\ / or ‘ ’) | — | Ablaut phenomenon |
/ | — | Ambigous morpheme | |
~ | — | Reduplication morpheme | |
_ | — | Fixed phrase | Fixed phrase |
In order to prevent any confusion between the meaning of “[ ]” and “( )” in the Greek line and “[ ]” and “( )” in the Glossing line, it is strongly advisable or, as far as “< >” is concerned, even mandatory not to use these symbols in their traditional meaning in the Glossing transcription line directly above the Glossing line at all. (Keep in mind that the number and sequence of “-”, “=”, “~”, and “< >” in the Glossing transcription and the gloss needs to match exactly.)
- Problematic examples
Greek (edited) | [πῦ]ρ | ἀναζέσ<α>ι | πολὺ | ἐκ | \τῆς/ | γῆς |
Glosses | fire(N)[SG.NOM/ACC] | boil_up:AOR.INF | much:N.SG.NOM/ACC | ELAT | DEF.F.SG.GEN | earth(F):SG.GEN |
Transcription (edited) | [pý]r | anazés<a>i | polý | ek | \tḗs/ | gḗs |
Glosses | fire(N)[SG.NOM/ACC] | boil_up:AOR.INF | much:N.SG.NOM/ACC | ELAT | DEF.F.SG.GEN | earth(F):SG.GEN |
The advices to provide a latin-based transcription and to keep the line directly above the Glossing line free of philological markup are the two main reason to provide the following three lines:
- a Greek line with philological markup,
- a Transcription line (without philological markup),
- the Glossing line.
- Example
Greek (edited) | [πῦ]ρ | ἀναζέσ<α>ι | πολὺ | ἐκ | \τῆς/ | γῆς |
Glossing transcription | pýr | anazésai | polý | ek | tḗs | gḗs |
Glosses | fire(N)[SG.NOM] | boil_up:AOR.INF | much:N.SG.NOM | ELAT | DEF.F.SG.GEN | earth(F):SG.GEN |
In the Glossing transcription line, all symbols need to be used according to the Glossing Rules. In the Traditional transliteration line, however, the encoder may use all the symbols according to his/her philological tradition.
X:C | X-C | X=C | X~C | X<C> | C1...C1 | X\C | X\C | X[C] | X.C | X(C) | X_Y | C/D |
unspecified | affix | clitic | reduplication | infix | circumfix | ablaut | transfix | ø morpheme | Portmanteau | inherent | phrase | polysemous |
Hands-on transcription transformation guidelines
To derive a valid Glossing transcription line from a Greek line with philological markup, the follwoing hand-on rules may help.
Compare the following table:
Greek (edited) | Glossing transcription line |
Examples |
---|---|---|
< > | leave brackets out; keep content | <π>ῦρ → pýr fire(N)[SG.NOM] ‘fire’ |
{ } | leave brackets and content out | πῦρ{ρ} → pýr fire(N)[SG.NOM] ‘fire’ |
[ ] | leave brackets out; keep content or leave it out | [πῦ]ρ → pýr fire(N)[SG.NOM] ‘fire’ π[ῦρ] → p[__] ‘[destroyed]’ |
[[ ]] | leave brackets and content out | πῦρ[[ρ]] → pýr fire(N)[SG.NOM] ‘fire’ |
( ) | leave parentheses out; keep content | ἀν(ὰ) → aná up ‘up’ |
dot below (e.g. ọ) |
leave dot below out; keep character | π̣ῦρ → pýr fire(N)[SG.NOM] ‘fire’ |
\ / or ‘ ’ | leave ‘slashes’ out; keep content | π\ῦ/ρ → pýr fire(N)[SG.NOM] ‘fire’ |
X:C | X-C | X=C | X~C | X<C> | C1...C1 | X\C | X\C | X[C] | X.C | X(C) | X_Y | C/D |
unspecified | affix | clitic | reduplication | infix | circumfix | ablaut | transfix | ø morpheme | Portmanteau | inherent | phrase | polysemous |
Common forms
(Please contribute) You might want to take Ancient Egyptian:Glossing recommendations as a model.