How is Turkey for travel? |
| I've heard good things. Is it reasonably safe? Diverse things to do?... |
|
Are hostels in Europe safe? |
| I want to backpack through Europe so badly and now would be a good time since I think I'm about to lose my job and I've read how much cheaper it will be to stay in hostels during the trip. I... |
|
Im looking for a good cheap European city for a stag do? |
| European city break which is cheap and good for a stag party.... |
|
Where in Europe does it snow on Xmas day? |
| Where are the best places to spend Christmas with guaranteed snow in Europe, preferbally in an historic City rather than ski resorts T... |
|
Why did Turkish goverment supported muslim terrorists in Albania and Bosnia, during the balkans wars? |
Turkish, Iranian and Saudi goverments were the biggest suporters of the terorists Albanians and Bosniaks Additional Details Albanians and Bosniaks terrorists burned whute-democratic S... |
|
Just a question now. would you change your name to more glamorous one for fame?? |
i was just looking for an answer aryan's question have a look what i found?;o)
http://www.spothaber.com
http://www.hollywoodusa.... |
|
How is honeymoon in europe? |
| which part of europe will be the best, i prefer travelling by eu-rail train.i want to spent 15 days in honeymoon. how much it will cost me (i dont want to spent too much). i never been in europe ... |
|
Is 1000 Russian rubbles a lot in Russia? |
| I know that about 2 dollars is about 60 rubbles, so does that mean that higher numbers of rubbles isn't a lot to Russians?... |
|
Driving in Poland? |
Hello
You who have been to Poland or you who are Polish - can you please tell me what it is like to drive in Poland. Is there a lot of traffic? Parking in cities? Car theft?... |
|
Funny if china decides to take vladavastock..? |
| I am just wondering if russia would respond the same way it did with georgia if china decide it wants to take vladavastock...that would be soo funny..to see russia get slapped silly by china... dont ... |
|
Which Greek Island would you own? |
Okay let's try this again!
You got an email that said you won the National Lottery of [insert country here] and the amazing thing is that you don't even remember buying a ... |
|
I want to ....? |
go to England for holiday but im scared of the airoplain
should i go or not?... |
|
Which european country has the best quality of life? |
| Job opportunities,health care,social benefits,food,low crime,..... |
|
New years in paris or london? |
| my family and i will be visiting europe this winter, but we're debating whether to spend new years in paris or london. any suggestions? which is more family friendly and what special events are ... |
|
Do u know any beautiful russian songs / melancholic musics? |
| i want russian songs especially solemn or melancholic musics... it gives me the creep!!! do u know any except tatu?... |
|
Would you spend...? |
$3,000 for a concert ticket for your child?
http://music.yahoo.com/r
Please state your opinion about this. Do you guys even know who this person is? Here in the U.S. she&... |
|
Should we thank the armenians to show their true faces here? |
Thank them to show:
1. their hate against a people they don't really know
2. that they devote their lives on lies
3. they have too much spare time because they don't really ... |
|
|  |

Muneera-Moni-Muna-Mo... |
What are the languages spoken in Greece? |
I need the percentage@=! Thanks! |
|
Show
all answers
|
|
|

I'm Macedonian!!!
|
Greek, Macedonian, Turkish, Albanian etc |
|

Antigon
 |
Besides Greek, also Macedonian (in secret, not allowed in public), Albanian, Turkish, Vlach, Roma,....
The Athens ABECEDAR Case
By signing the Treaty of Sevres on 10th August, 1920, the Greek government undertook certain obligations regarding "the protection of the non-Greek national minorities in Greece". Articles 7, 8 and 9 of this treaty stipulated precisely the free use of the minorities' language, education, religious practice, etc. Bulgaria and the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes interested themselves in the implementation of this treaty, and when Greece realized it was in its interest to sign the "Lesser Protocols" (League of Nations, Geneva, 29th September 1924) on the protection of the Greek minority in Bulgaria and the reciprocal protection of the Bulgarian minority in Greece, Sofia launched a campaign in support of the activities initiated by the Joint Greek-Bulgarian Commission for the ,'voluntary" exchange of minorities. Large numbers of Macedonians were forcibly moved to Bulgaria, and Orthodox Christians from Turkey, Bulgaria and other places were brought to the Aegean part of Macedonia where, as Greeks, they took over the Macedonians' property. However, since this met with resolute opposition not only in Sofia but in Belgrade as well, the Greek parliament did not ratify certain relevant clauses of the "Lesser Protocols". In March 1925 the Council of the League of Nations concerned itself with the situation so created and addressed three questions to the Greek government, insisting particularly on a reply on the measures taken with regards to the needs, the education and the freedom of religious practice of the "Slav speaking minority" in Greece. These documents treated the Macedonians neither as a Serbian nor as a Bulgarian minority, but as a "Slav-speaking minority". In its reply the Greek government categorically denied the Bulgarian government the right to be interested in the "Slav-speaking minority", claiming that only the League of Nations could have and had the right to intervene with regard to the rights of this minority. Greece stated that no steps were taken for the protection of the "Slav-speaking minority in Greece" as it had been thought that the convention on reciprocal resettlement would result in "the moving of all Macedonians" beyond the borders of Greece. The Greek government also notified the League of Nations that "measures were being taken towards the opening of schools with instruction in the Slav language in the following school year of 1925/26" and towards granting freedom to practice religion in the Slav language. The primer intended for the Macedonian children in this part of Macedonia, entitled ABECEDAR, was offered as an argument in support of this statement. This primer, prepared by a special government commission and published by the Greek government in Athens in 1925, was written in the Lerin-Bitola vernacular (even though Bitola was not within the Greek borders!) but printed in a specially adapted Latin alphabet (instead of the traditional Cyrillic, which was the official alphabet of Bulgaria and Serbia). Many primers written mainly in Macedonian and intended for schools in Macedonia were published in the 19th century, but this was the first primer for Macedonians written and published by a legitimate government for its citizens and under the aegis of the League of Nations. This significant act on the part of the Greek government was condemned outright by both Belgrade and Sofia. The former proved that those for whom the primer was intended were in fact "Serbs", whereas the latter claimed that they were "Bulgarians". Bulgaria commissioned its outstanding philologists and Slavists to help its diplomats and Belgrade inspired petitions from two ailari villages (written in Serbian!) which were sent to the League of Nations. These petitions stated that the signatories were "Serbs by nationality" and that they demanded their rights "as a national minority" and also a "Serbian school" in order to "protect their language from enforced Graecization". At the same time, propaganda activities were undertaken among the population of these villages, promising free land and Serbian priests and teachers to those who declared themselves as Serbs. The Greek government's immediate response was another petition from the same village (Birinci), signed 16th October 1925, in which the signatories claimed that "in this region there are no Serbs, nor are there any Serbian institutions, and consequently the Serbian language is not used". The League of Nations used this statement to ask, in writing, the following question: the Greek government claims that this population does not speak Serbian, but does not say "what the language they speak in is". At the last moment before the deadline the Greek government replied by cable saying that "the population of these villages knows neither the Serbian nor the Bulgarian language and speaks nothing but a Slav-Macedonian idiom". Thus the Greek government officially recognized for the first time the separate national entity of the Macedonians within Greece's borders, which is also clearly confirmed by the pure language of the pnmer, ABECEDAR, published in Greece. Following the stormy and violent reaction in the press of the three monarchies the Greek government decided, with relief, not to introduce the primer, which was already published, into Macedonian schools. |
|

greetings_losers
 |
Cant give u the percentages but apart from Greek, there is Arvanite, most widely spoken language after Greek. Arvanites of Greece (they dont want to accept theyre actually Ortohodox Albanians btw) refuse their Albanian identity mostly and identify themselves as Greeks. Maybe 2-3 genrations earlier most of them could not even speak Greek. Theodoros Paggalos is one of the many Arvanites of Greece. There are also Turks of Western Thrace, whose mother tongue have always been Turkish. They could not work as officials in state offices since it's claimed that they cant speak Greek well enough. There are more than 100.000 Turks (Pomaks included, originally Bulgarian muslims, who identify themselves as Turks) Pomaks speak a kind of Bulgarian among themselves though they all are fluent in Turkish as well. There are also Gypsies, identified as Roma. There were also Macedonian Slavs but after the exchange almost all of them were sent to Rep. of Macedonia. There are Çam Albanians, muslim Albanians who spoke Albanian again but I dont know how many of them left in there. Vlachs, orthodox vulgar-Latin (u may call it Romanian) speaking people of Greece are now fully integrated in the Greek population. They consider themselves Greeks as well. |
|

Teona
|
I SPEAK GREEK CAUSE WE ARE TOLD TO. BUT MY MOTHERS TONGUE IS MACEDONIAN. IT IS FORBIDDEN LANGUAGE HERE.
TO THE SERVIAN: WRONG SECTION. GO TO KOSOVARS ONE. |
|

Myrina
 |
Greek, of course!
99.5% of the population speak it.
Hellinika = Ελληνικά
http://www.greek-language.com/historyofgreek/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_language |
|

islander
|
Greek is spoken as the native languages and it is recognized by the Greek government as the official language
and English as the Secondary Language. The people speak 100% Greek. Most of the people speak other European Languges such as English, French, German, Italian, Spanish ,
Turkish, Bulgarian, and Albanian and other European Languages. |
|

Vasiliki-Βασιλική
|
greek 100%
next,do you ask about immigrants or citizens?
and for some annoying people here
slavophone greeks are 10-30.000 which means about
0.36% of greeks (if they are 30.000 the slavophone) speak both greek and slavic
so this 0.36% could be fyromian,boulgarian or serbian
second there are some percertance of the turkish origin muslim who might speak both greek and turkish
but this question is about what they speak as second language ,as first,or for the bilinguals????
albanians and so on,is a language spoken by the immigrants,and not the citizens.........
teona nothing is forbidden there.
so if you speak greek can we have a chat through mails??
to prove you speak greek:P
and you are also in wrong section,and all the fyromians,go to europe others.this is greek section
what do you know all about greek and whats going on here?? |
|

Karishma
 |
Hey!
My Macedonian friend once told me that 98% people in Greece speak greek.
The rest? I dono, maybe Romany (gypsies). The people in Greece also speak English+French... |
|

serbia4ever
|
Only Greek!!! |
|

cygnet217
|
http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=GR |
|

Jordan V
 |
greek ???% |
|

|
|
|

| |
|
| |  |
| Questions List |
Answers | |
| |
11 | | | |
11 | | | |
11 | | | |
11 | | | |
11 | | | |
11 | | | |
11 | | | |
11 | | | |
11 | | | |
10 | |
|