Greek Dialects
Greek was not a uniform language; there were scores of dialects even within the tiny geographical area of mainland Greece. Greeks of different dialects could speak to and understand each other, with varying degrees of difficulty. Two dialects that were widely distant from each other might be just barely intelligible to each other. This would change over time. As the Greeks became more cosmopolitan, coming into wider and more frequent contact with each other and with other nations, the Greek language became more uniform. The development of literature and song also became a force for standardization, although never to the degree that we have seen for our own language under the influence of the printing press and television.The principal divisions of Greek dialect are between Aeolic, Ionic, and Doric.
Attic-Ionic
This dialect group defines a series of closely related dialects spoken by Athenians and the Ionians occupying islands in the Aegean and the coast of modern day Turkey, but also includes several dialects spoken by peoples on the Aegean coast of the Greek mainland. This suggests that the Athenians are culturally related in some way to the Ionian Greeks. Due to the fact that Ionia and Athens are two of the greatest contributors to Greek cultural development (especially literature) and since they become, over time, the most economically successful, this group of dialects eventually becomes the most pervasive.Most literature surviving from ancient Greece today is in the Attic or Ionic dialects. The Ionic dialect of Athens, Attic, is distinctive. Attic Greek is the language of the bulk of Golden Age Greek literature, and it is what students study when they begin to study Classical Greek.






