Coptic; for considerations on the <span class="searchmatch">demotic</span> register of modern Greek, see Wiktionary:Greek <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> <span class="searchmatch">guidelines</span>. The <span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> script is not encoded in Unicode...
discussed separately at Wiktionary:Coptic <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> <span class="searchmatch">guidelines</span>, Egyptian <span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> at Wiktionary:<span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> <span class="searchmatch">guidelines</span>, and the Egyptian dialect of Arabic at...
be found. Greek <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> <span class="searchmatch">guidelines</span> is intended as an aid for editors adding Greek terms here. It should be read in conjunction with <span class="searchmatch">Entry</span> layout explained;...
not Crimean Gothic, as the latter is taken to refer specifically to the <span class="searchmatch">demotic</span> vernacular recorded by De Busbecq in the the 16th century. ^ Thomas O....
concerning transliteration in Ancient Greek <span class="searchmatch">entries</span>. This page is an extension of Wiktionary:Ancient Greek <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> <span class="searchmatch">guidelines</span>. See also Category:Ancient Greek IPA...
elsewhere. See also: Wiktionary:Ancient Greek <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> <span class="searchmatch">guidelines</span>, Wiktionary:Italiot Greek <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> <span class="searchmatch">guidelines</span> Wikipedia has a section on the Greek alphabet...
attention by @Poursa0 on Discord that this isn't Mariupol Greek, but rather <span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span>. So we're back to square one. Thadh (talk) 06:51, 11 August 2022 (UTC)...
interested in <span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> (the Egyptian kind, not Greek): I’ve recently been working on an About <span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> page to standardize our <span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> <span class="searchmatch">entries</span> and transliteration...
unqualified ‘<span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span>’ in English almost always means Egyptian <span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> (or simply the adjective) and Egyptian <span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> is almost always called simply ‘<span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span>’, whereas...
there are polytonic forms that belong purely to "<span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> Greek" (βασιληᾶς or βασιλιᾶς). Also "<span class="searchmatch">Demotic</span> Greek" is not a "descendant" of "Katharevousa". But...