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Lifted from: [[1]] in trying to solve Unicode.

Combining character display

 ́ á ā́ é ḗ  í ī́  ó ṓ ú ū́ ý ȳ́
ά ᾱ́ ί ῑ́ ύ ῡ́
 ́  á ā́ é ḗ í ī́ ó ṓ ú ū́ ý ȳ́
ά ᾱ́ ί ῑ́ ύ ῡ́


Greek tables

Greek nouns
gender case number
masculine
feminine

neuter
nominative
genitive
dative
accusative
vocative
singular
(dual)
plural

In Ancient Greek, a noun has one grammatical gender (either masculine, feminine, or neuter) and is used in one number (either singular or plural, or in rare cases dual). Depending on its function in a clause, it takes one of three cases (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, or vocative).

A noun's declension (either first, second, or third) determines its endings for case and number.

Greek declensions
thematic athematic
first second third
thematic vowel consonant vowel, sigma
ᾱ ~ η ᾱ ~ η
ᾰ (ᾱς ~ ης)
ᾱς ~ ης (-ου)
ο/ε -ος -ον
-ους -ουν
-ως -ων
τ- δ- θ-
π- β- φ-
κ- γ- χ-
ν- ρ-
ντ-
-ς —

-ξ —
-ν -ρ
-ς -ν
ι- ~ (ι̯)-
υ- ~ (ϝ)-
ε(σ)-
-ις
-υς
-ος/-ης
stem nom. (gen.) stem nom. stem nom. stem nom.