Learn the Griego Alphabet: Letters, Sounds, and How to Read

Principiante6 min24 caracteresCon audio
The Greek alphabet has 24 letters and is the direct ancestor of both the Latin and Cyrillic scripts. It is used today to write modern Greek (spoken by about 13 million people in Greece and Cyprus) and appears throughout mathematics, physics, and engineering notation worldwide. Greek was the first writing system to represent vowels systematically, which makes it the oldest true alphabet still in continuous use. Most learners can recognize all 24 letters within a few days and read short Greek text within two weeks; modern Greek pronunciation is highly regular, so once you know the letters you can sound out almost any word.
Letters
24
Direction
Left to right
Used in
Greece, Cyprus
Oldest attested
9th century BCE
En esta página
  1. 1. History and evolution
  2. 2. Where the shapes come from
  3. 3. How Greek fits in written Griego
  4. 4. Common pitfalls
  5. 5. How to learn Griego
  6. 6. Frequently asked questions
Alphabet
Standard alphabetical order

History and evolution

The Greek alphabet emerged around the 9th century BCE in the western Aegean, adapted from the Phoenician abjad encountered through trade. Its single most important innovation was repurposing Phoenician consonants the Greeks did not need (aleph, he, yod, waw, ayin) as vowel letters (α, ε, ι, υ, ο). This made Greek the first alphabet able to spell any spoken word unambiguously, a leap the Phoenician script (consonants only) could not match. Over the following centuries, regional variants proliferated; the Ionian form of the alphabet was officially adopted by Athens in 403 BCE and gradually displaced all others to become the 24-letter set used today. The script was standardized by the Alexandrian grammarians around 200 BCE, who added the diacritical accents (acute, grave, circumflex) that persisted until the 1982 monotonic reform reduced them to a single stress mark. Classical Greek became the literary and scientific language of the Mediterranean, and the alphabet itself traveled west to the Romans (via Etruscan intermediaries) and east to the Slavs via Cyril and Methodius, spawning the Latin and Cyrillic scripts respectively.

Where the shapes come from

Every Greek letter descends from a specific Phoenician character, usually via a shape-and-sound correspondence. Alpha (Α) is a rotated aleph (ox head); beta (Β) is a bet (house); gamma (Γ) is gimel (camel or throwing stick); delta (Δ) is dalet (door). The Greek letter names themselves (alpha, beta, gamma, delta…) are Greek pronunciations of the original Phoenician words for those shapes. This is also the origin of the word "alphabet" itself: from alpha and beta, the first two letters.

How Greek fits in written Griego

Modern Greek is written in monotonic orthography (since 1982): one acute accent per word marks the stressed syllable. Sigma has two lowercase forms: σ at the start and middle of a word, and ς at the end. Seven letters (α, ε, η, ι, ο, υ, ω) are vowels; the rest are consonants. Digraphs are common: ου is the "oo" in "boot", αι is "e" as in "bed", ει is "i". Greek punctuation uses the same comma and period as English, but the question mark is a semicolon (;) and the semicolon is a raised dot (·).

Common pitfalls

Multiple letters, one sound
Η (eta), Ι (iota), Υ (upsilon), and the digraphs ει and οι all produce the "i" sound in modern Greek. This is a fossil of ancient pronunciation; spelling distinguishes them, but pronunciation does not. Learn the correct spelling per word rather than trying to hear a difference.
Uppercase and lowercase often look unrelated
Λ/λ, Γ/γ, Ρ/ρ, Σ/σ look substantially different from their capitals. The Greek lowercase was a separate cursive script that only became the "lowercase" in the Byzantine period. Learn the pair together, not just one form.
Final sigma ς vs normal sigma σ
Sigma at the end of a word is always written ς (e.g., γλώσσας, languages). Inside the word it stays σ. This is a positional rule like Hebrew's final forms, unique to sigma in Greek.
Χ is not an X sound
Greek Χ (chi) is pronounced like the German ch or Scottish loch, not like English X. The "ks" sound in Greek is written Ξ (xi). This trips up English readers who see X shapes and expect X sounds.

How to learn Griego

  1. Start with the letters that already look and sound like Latin: Α, Β, Ε, Ζ, Ι, Κ, Μ, Ν, Ο, Τ. You already know ten of the twenty-four letters on sight.
  2. Tackle the false friends next: Ρ is "r" not "p", Η is "i" not "h", Ν is "n" not "v", Χ is the guttural "ch" not the English X. This group causes the most misreads.
  3. Learn the unique shapes last: Ξ, Φ, Ψ, Ω. These have no Latin lookalikes but are highly distinctive, so they stick fast.
  4. Use spaced repetition for the first two weeks (Karpicke & Roediger, 2008, on the testing effect). Ten minutes of daily recall beats every other technique for alphabet memorization.
  5. Read real Greek text as soon as you have the full 24 letters. Street signs, brand names, and the Wikipedia article titled Ελληνικό αλφάβητο drill recognition in context.
  6. Do not over-index on stress marks in your first month. Modern Greek has only one diacritic (the acute ΄), and stress patterns are learned with vocabulary, not in isolation.

Frequently asked questions

¿cuántas letras tiene el alfabeto griego?

El alfabeto griego tiene 24 letras, desde Alpha (Α, α) hasta Omega (Ω, ω). Incluye 7 vocales (Α, Ε, Η, Ι, Ο, Υ, Ω) y 17 consonantes. La mayoría de las letras corresponden a un único sonido, lo que hace la pronunciación predecible una vez que las memorizas. Los principiantes pueden aprender las 24 letras en una o dos semanas de práctica concentrada.

¿cuál es el orden del alfabeto griego?

Las 24 letras griegas en orden son: Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, Theta, Iota, Kappa, Lambda, Mu, Nu, Xi, Omicron, Pi, Rho, Sigma, Tau, Upsilon, Phi, Chi, Psi, Omega. Esta secuencia se ha mantenido sin cambios desde alrededor del 400 a.C. y se utiliza en el griego moderno, matemáticas y ciencia.

¿cómo se pronuncia el alfabeto griego?

La pronunciación del griego moderno es en gran medida fonética: cada letra tiene un sonido consistente. Las diferencias clave con el inglés incluyen Γ (gamma), pronunciada como una suave "gh" gutural; Δ (delta), como "th" en "this"; y Χ (chi), un sonido suave "kh". Las vocales son directas, con Η, Ι, Υ todas pronunciadas "ee". Practica con grabaciones de audio para mejorar rápidamente.

¿existe una canción del alfabeto griego para memorizar las letras?

Sí, varias canciones del alfabeto griego establecen las 24 letras en melodías simples, similar a la canción ABC en inglés. Canales de YouTube como Learn Greek with Lina y GreekPod101 ofrecen versiones populares. Cantar las letras en orden construye la memoria más rápido que la memorización mecánica, y la mayoría de los estudiantes pueden recitar el alfabeto completo después de algunos días de escucha.

¿dónde encuentro una tabla del alfabeto griego?

Una buena tabla del alfabeto griego muestra cada letra en mayúscula, minúscula, nombre y pronunciación lado a lado. Omniglot y GreekPod101 ofrecen tablas imprimibles gratuitas. Para mejores resultados, imprime una y mantenla en tu escritorio mientras practicas escribir cada letra a mano, lo que refuerza el reconocimiento visual y la memoria muscular simultáneamente.

¿cómo aprender el alfabeto griego?

Comienza agrupando las 24 letras en conjuntos familiares y desconocidos. Aproximadamente 11 letras (como Α, Β, Κ, Τ) se parecen y suenan similar al inglés. Aprende esas primero, luego aborda letras que se ven familiares pero suenan diferente (como Ρ, que suena como "r"). Practica escribir cada letra diariamente y usa aplicaciones de tarjetas como Anki para entrenar el reconocimiento.

¿cómo aprender a leer griego?

Una vez que conoces las 24 letras, comienza a leer palabras simples en voz alta porque la ortografía griega es altamente fonética. Practica con libros infantiles o lectores graduados como "Greek Easy Readers" para desarrollar fluidez. Enfócate en combinaciones de letras comunes (ου = "oo", αι = "eh", μπ = "b") temprano, ya que estos dígrafos aparecen constantemente en textos griegos cotidianos.

¿cuánto tiempo tarda aprender el alfabeto griego?

La mayoría de los principiantes pueden reconocer y escribir las 24 letras griegas en una o dos semanas de sesiones diarias de 15 a 20 minutos. La fluidez lectora toma más tiempo, típicamente cuatro a seis semanas, porque también necesitas aprender dígrafos comunes y reglas de acentuación. La práctica consistente de escritura a mano y ejercicios con tarjetas aceleran significativamente el proceso.

Otros sistemas de escritura

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