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 | | Actually, if you listen carefully to native Greek speakers, it sounds a bit between [s] and [sh] (probably because there is no [sh] in Greek, so the sound is somewhat shifted in the phonological space). |
 | | Remember, there is no [sh] in Greek (except in the dialect of Crete, to be accurate), and thatâs why hearing [sh] sounds very foreign to the Greek ear. |
 | | The digraph ηÏ
(eta + upsilon) is extremely rare in Modern Greek; it appears in two verb-forms only: αÏηÏδηÏα [apivthisa] (=âI got fed upâ), and αÏηÏθÏ
να [apifthina] (=âI directed my speech to sb.â); it was much more common in ancient Greek, though. |
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