We made using the FSI Greek - Basic Course - Volume 2 material easier to use and more effective. You can now read the ebook (in the pane on the left), listen to the audio (pane to the right) and practice your pronunciation (use on the Pronunciation Tool tab on right) all at the same time.

The FSI Greek - Basic Course - Volume 2 material can be used both as a self-guided course or with the assistance of a qualified tutor.

NOTE: Some of these ebooks are quite large and may take a minute to fully load.

Pronunciation tool

NOTE: To read the file, listen to the audios and use the pronunciation tab on your computer or device you need to have a PDF reader and a modern browser.

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Review of Units 26-30

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Review of Units 31-35

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Review of Units 36-40

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 26

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 27

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 28

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 29

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 30

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 31

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 32

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 33

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 36

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 37

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 38

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 39

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 40

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 41

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 42

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 43

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 44

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 45

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 46

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 47

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 48

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 49

Greek Basic Course - Volume 2 - Unit 50

207 Pages of Free Lessons
578 Minutes of Free Audios
139862 KBs of Free Material
FSI Greek - Basic Course - Volume 2 - Image The Greek described in this FSI Basic Greek Course (volume 2 of 3) is representative of the kathomilumeni variety, i.e. that of the 'standard! speech of educated Greeks. As the influences from the other styles of Greek on the natural speech of an educated person vary according to the speaker and thus create a great variety of !correct' utterances, both the most common dhimotiki and kathaverusa forms are represented in the Basic Dialogues and Grammatical Notes. At the same time the use of extreme dhimotiki or toverpure1 katharevusa is carefully avoided.

The whole Course consists of 75 units and is divided into three volumes, each volume containing 25 units. After every five units there is a Review con-sisting of a Narrative which is based on the vocabulary of previous units. In addition to this the Review Units of Volume I have Review Drills in which the student is supposed to supply proper forms of given words. These drills are continued in more advanced units in connection with the katharevusa grammatical forms. Katharevusa is systematically introduced in the narratives of Volume III and the rules of katharevusa grammar are discussed in the subsequent grammatical notes. Thus the student who has completed Volume III of this Course should have a good foundation for reading official documents as well as newspapers written in katharevusa.

The following parts may be found in a Unit:
-Basic Dialogue Sample Drills
-Response Drill
-Substitution Drills
-Useful Words
-Transformation Drills
-Polite Expressions Correlation
-Substitution Drills
-Narrative Response Exercise
-Grammatical Notes
-Topics for Discussion

You can find the other volumes of the FSI Greek Basic Course here:
- FSI Greek - Basic Course - Volume 1
- FSI Greek - Basic Course - Volume 3
Greek is an independent branch of the Indo-European family of languages, native to the southern Balkans, the Aegean Islands, western Asia Minor, southern Italy and Cyprus. It has the longest documented history of any Indo-European language, spanning 34 centuries of written records. Its writing system has been the Greek alphabet for the majority of its history; other systems, such as Linear B and the Cypriot syllabary, were used previously. The alphabet arose from the Phoenician script and was in turn the basis of the Coptic, Cyrillic, Gothic, Latin and many other writing systems.
Greek is spoken in: Greece
Greek is also called: Ellinika, Graecae, Grec, Greco, Neo-Hellenic, Romaic

Downloads

To download any of the files below to your default download location, just click on the link.
To download the link to a specific location, right-click on the link of the file you want to download. A menu should appear on your screen when you do. From that menu select "Save Link As..." (the exact wording can vary depending on your browser or operating system).