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Modern Greek: Lesson 16 - Ψωνίζοντας δώρα στην Ελλάδα

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Uploaded by on Jan 30, 2009

Learn the Greek language. Video corresponds with lesson 16 from the textbook "Modern Greek" published by Papaloizos Publications and written by Dr. Theodore C. Papaloizos.

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  • Greek and Spanish are both so beautiful. <3

  • Latrevo tin elliniki glossa einai para poli oraia :) I love the Greek language language, it is very beautiful, katalaveno polu, i understand it a lot :)

    Xairetismoi apo ena Braziliano portogalikis kai italikis katagogis. Greetings fom a Brazilian of Portuguese and Italian extraction

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  • love...love.....love....LOVE Greek and the accent especially....♥ Σ'αγαπώ Ελλάδα!! τζαι Κύπρος♥

  • @makedonec94 gay is your father Vardaskian that language speak alexander the great

  • It sounds gay

  • @gabrinail yes, έλα means "come". We usually say that on the phone when we know who is calling, when we expect a certain call from somebody.I know it does not make sense, it's an expression. Otherwise we say ναι? (yes?), εμπρός (forward, go on), παρακαλώ? (please?)

  • @notgodsemigod Greek is distantly related to Spanish....The proto-greek family, and the latin family both descend from protoindoeuropean, and there are many similarities in the verb conjugation systems as to deny their connection...

  • @greekmadnessss Hello! I'm Italian and am trying to learn this language which I find quite difficult. I've heard people saying "ela" when answering the phone. Doesn't this word mean "come" ?

  • @notgodsemigod Before a 'reasonably educated/literate' person knows any Greek, they always mistake it for Spanish when they hear Greeks talking. It has something 'Mediterranean' in it ;) I speak a little Greek now (A2 level) and I have spoken Spanish fluently for 16 years..... I cannot but confirm that some of the sounds are definitely the same.

  • χαχαχαχαχ σορρυ κιολασ σαν να ακους τσόντα ειναι σε καποια φάση !!

    κατα τ αλλα καη δουλειά!!

  • @justmine4me They sound similar, yet they're not, what makes them sound similar is the fact that they only have 5 vowels.

  • @notgodsemigod not true. Arabic language lacks p, but it does have d, th and b. Turkish have p,b,d but not th

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