252 episodes

Bite size podcast. Every Sunday, Greek words used in the English language. Travelling words connecting cultures.

Your Greek Word On A Sunday Emmanuela Lia

    • Education

Bite size podcast. Every Sunday, Greek words used in the English language. Travelling words connecting cultures.

    Episode 252: Heresy

    Episode 252: Heresy

    (Intro & piano music)

    Plato wrote 'Our salvation depends on the correct choice between pleasure and sadness, that is the choice between more, or less.' The ancient Greek verb Αιρώ (aero) has been completely claimed by Christianity and turned on its head with regards to the original meaning and perception of the word. In 380 AD, the Roman emperor Theodosius the 1st , legally tied the word to anyone not Christian (at the time the division between the Catholic and the Orthodox church didn't exist. In fact, Theodosius was the last emperor before the split.) So he drafted 'The Edict Of Thessalonica' which he fought tooth and nail throughout his life trying to enforce in the empire . And he succeeded. The original word means 'the right to choose/the right to a different belief'  and it was commonly used up until that point. 'We order the followers of this law to embrace the name of Catholic Christians; but as for the others, since, in our judgment they are foolish madmen, we decree that they shall be branded with the ignominious name of heretics...' The word was written down and passed on in all religious texts and that's how it arrived in England . The word also became a crime in 1401 and was decriminalised in 1677 putting a stop to the punishment which was death by burning at the stake and giving people back the freedom to choose (well, sort of) ΑΙΡΕΣΗ/HERESY
    Twitter @yourgreeksunday ,
    Instagram @emmanuela_lia ,
    email yourgreeksunday@gmail.com

    • 2 min
    Episode 251: Charisma

    Episode 251: Charisma

    (Intro & piano music)

    In ancient Greek mythology there are three women (sometimes more) , daughters of Zeus (sometimes of the Sun or of Dionysus) that are responsible for organising all the feasts in Mount Olympus and making sure that everything is beautiful, joyous, healthy and sexy. No, they're not the Muses although, they were all good friends. They are Aphrodite's followers and they are The Graces! Χάριτες (Charites) in Greek. Their names Αγλαϊα (Aglaea-Radiance), Ευφροσύνη(Evfrosini-Joy) and Θάλεια (Thalia-Boom). They were worshiped all around Greece  but they had their own temple in the mainland where three rocks  fell from the sky (yes ,rocks) and were worshiped until people carved and made statues of them. There was a big art festival dedicated to them and archaeologists have discovered plaques with names of musicians and poets and artists that have won the competition. Although their English name is The Graces, their touch to a human's life has the same name as an offering from the gods in Greek. It's a ΧΑΡΙΣΜΑ/CHARISMA
    Twitter @yourgreeksunday ,
    Instagram @emmanuela_lia ,
    email yourgreeksunday@gmail.com

    • 1 min
    Episode 250: Idiosyncrasy

    Episode 250: Idiosyncrasy

    (Intro & piano music)

    I have a three combo word for you today, yup, that's as Greek as it gets! And it seems to have been distorted a little in English in order to single out personality traits but: Ιδιος (idios) in ancient Greek meant 'one's own', we could say 'one's self' but... mmm... ok let's go with that! Συν (sin) means 'with' and κράση (krasi) means 'a mixture' . So the combination of all the things that make someone themselves. From your personality, to your mannerisms, to the way you carry yourself. That singular combination and not one personality trait, that makes you, you is your  ΙΔΙΟΣΥΓΚΡΑΣΙΑ/IDIOSYNCRASY 
    Twitter @yourgreeksunday ,
    Instagram @emmanuela_lia ,
    email yourgreeksunday@gmail.com

    • 1 min
    Episode 249: Stereotype

    Episode 249: Stereotype

    (intro & piano music)

    Τύπτω (tipto) in ancient Greek means 'I strike', 'hit' or 'dent' something. In Latin it was 'typus' and meant 'symbol' or 'an emblem'. Around 1713 it moved to meaning 'printed on metal or wood'. Στερεό (stereo) means 'solid' and the combined word in 1804 meant a printing plate, an additional meaning in 1819 was 'to fix something firmly' and lastly in 1953 the word got  the meaning we still use today ΣΤΕΡΕΟΤΥΠΟ/ STEREOTYPE
    Twitter @yourgreeksunday ,
    Instagram @emmanuela_lia ,
    email yourgreeksunday@gmail.com

    • 56 sec
    Episode 248: Pseudonym

    Episode 248: Pseudonym

    (Intro & piano music)

    My first job, shortly after I arrived in England, was a stage adaptation of 'Middlemarch', an epic story by George Eliot. The pen name of Mary Ann Evans. As time went by ,I realised that the name I was known for in Greece and had been working for years was too difficult for anyone in this industry to remember so, I decided to keep my first name but officially shorten my surname. In fact if you go to my IMDb you'll see three different versions of my name all of which are versions of my real name. Ψευδές (psevdes) means 'False' and όνομα (onoma) means 'name' . The combined word came to England from France in 1828 and was spelled in Latin characters. It is used only for when a person changes their name for a specific purpose , a pen name or a stage one. ΨΕΥΔΟΝΥΜΟ/PSEUDONYM
    Twitter @yourgreeksunday ,
    Instagram @emmanuela_lia ,
    email yourgreeksunday@gmail.com

    • 1 min
    Episode 247: Labyrinth

    Episode 247: Labyrinth

    (Intro & piano music)

    The history of this word goes back to those considered to be the first European civilisation. There is truth and there is myth connected to the Minoans.  A name we know was given to them by the Greeks but have no evidence that, that's what they called themselves. Archaeological discoveries place them in Crete and their first ruler, according to the Greeks, was King Minos (his story and myth are for another episode).  The symbol mostly found in the unearthing of this ancient civilisation is a double axe known as Λάβρυς (Lavris/Labris). Ancient Greek historians would write about the main palace in ancient Κνωσσός (Knossos) The capital city of ancient Crete, as 'The House of Λάβρυς' and surprisingly it's not shaped as a double axe but a ΛΑΒΥΡΙΝΘΟΣ/LABYRINTH 
    Twitter @yourgreeksunday ,
    Instagram @emmanuela_lia ,
    email yourgreeksunday@gmail.com

    • 1 min

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