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“Let Us Look At Them As They Are”: Lord Byron and Modern Greek Language, Literature, and Print Culture

European Romantic Review, 2016
ABSTRACTOn his first trip to Greece from 1809 to 1811, Lord Byron became intensely preoccupied with Modern Greek language, literature, and print culture. This paper probes that interest by examining Byron's response to an 1810 Edinburgh Review article that begins as an even-handed analysis of Modern Greek literature but ends up disparaging Modern Greek
Alexander Grammatikos
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AT THE SERVICE OF ANCIENT GREEK LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE:

Language, Grammar, and Erudition, 2018
Pierre Peter Swiggers Van Deun
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Representations of Refugees, Traffickers and Local People in Greek Literature during the European Migrant Crisis (2014-1018)

The GLOCAL in Mediterranean and Europe 2022, 2023
This paper investigates Greek literature (prose and poetry), written, in its bulk, during the years of the European migrant crisis (2014-2018) to uncover ways in which refugees, traffickers, and locals are presented. Following a literature review and the
Christina Linardaki, Marie Lavrentiadou
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Which extralinguistic factors affect written production skills in foreign language attrition? A longitudinal study of Greek learners having acquired French in a formal instructional setting

Language Learning Journal, 2023
In the vast literature on language attrition, studies on the role of extralinguistic factors in language retention, particularly concerning foreign language (FL) skills acquired in formal instructional contexts, are scarce.
Kleopatra Mytara, Barbara Köpke
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Awriten on þreo geþeode: The concept of Hebrew, Greek, and Latin in Old English and Anglo-Latin Literature

Journal of English and Germanic Philology, 2021
The elevated status of Hebrew, Greek, and Latin in medieval literature cannot be overstated. Authors from Late Antiquity to the Renaissance proclaimed that Hebrew is the original language of humankind, Greek of the great philosophers and poets, and Latin
Tristan Major
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