The “Easy Greek Stories” podcast - Episode 26 | Omilo

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  • Опубліковано 17 вер 2024
  • The “Easy Greek Stories” podcast - Episode 26
    Ένας παράδεισος μόνο για άντρες - A paradise for men only
    masaresi.com/p....
    In this episode, Omilo teacher Myrto reads for you the story about Mount Athos, and how somebody decides to go and live there.
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    The podcast recordings are available on SoundCloud, Spotify, Apple Podcast, Google Podcast - you can listen to them online and anytime.
    In those podcast recordings, the story is read at a slow pace first, followed by the same story at a normal speaking pace.
    However, here on UA-cam, you will only hear the story in the slower speaking pace, together with the Greek subtitles, so you will be able to listen to the story, while reading the subtitles at the same time.
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    Every 2nd month we publish one new Greek authentic story, written by Maya Andreadi, a non-Greek living for 30 years in Greece. Maya loves Greece, completely adapted to the Greek way of life, embraced the Greek culture, and together with her Greek husband, they also raised their two children in Greece. The Greek stories are read by native speakers Eva, Myrto and/or Sophia, and proofread by native Greek speaker Myrto, who is also teaching Greek at the Omilo Greek Language and Culture School. Moreover, Myrto also adds extra grammar as well as grammar exercises to the companion notebook, so you can practice your Greek even more.
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    Every podcast story has a companion notebook, which means a digital eBook, which you can also print yourself.
    It includes;
    * the Greek transcript,
    * English translation,
    * vocabulary list
    * exercise to practice grammar + answer key
    * the video link + Greek subtitles, without advertisements.
    * the podcast links on various channels, as well as the recording MP3 file, which you can download to your computer, and listen to without needing the internet.
    the podcast is read at a slow pace first, followed by a normal Greek-speaking pace.
    masaresi.com/p....
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    Podcast story script + Notebook content & design ; Maya Andreadi
    Podcast and Video montage, Notebook proofreading and grammar; Myrto Yfanti
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    Curious and interested to see how a Notebook looks like? Then download the FREE Podcast notebook, for STORY#1, and get a better idea of what it offers. You can download it at
    omilo.com/for-....
    Enjoy listening to Greek stories from any place, any time…
    This is a printable Notebook, PDF file
    A4 format, 20 pages
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    Interested in more authentic Greek stories? Then check more videos on this channel, and get your companion notebooks at ; masaresi.com/p....
    We hope that you will discover new and interesting things about Greece, while improving your Greek and enjoying listening to those short stories, taking place in Greece
    (Note: this podcast is not a Greek course and the episodes don’t follow a step-by-step grammar or difficulty sequence.)
    More info at
    omilo.com/podc....
    #greekpodcast #learninggreek #greekstories #greeklanguage #greeklessons #greekgrammar #learninggreekisfun #learngreek #greekingreece #omilogreeklanguageandculture

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4

  • @sunniva2407
    @sunniva2407 11 місяців тому +1

    Love this 🤩

  • @wolfganglechner-c6e
    @wolfganglechner-c6e 7 місяців тому +1

    hi mirto, a question. Κανάριες Νήσοi l thought nisi was neuter and makes nisia in plural but l found nisoi in the dict. thanks for your help

    • @OmiloHellas
      @OmiloHellas  7 місяців тому +1

      Hello Wolfgang and thank you for your comment. It is a good question and happy you dive into the Greek Language.
      In modern Greek it is "το νησί" in Singular and "τα νησιά" in Plural but in ancient Greek it was "ἡ νῆσος" in Singular and "αἱ νῆσοι" in Plural.
      In ancient Greek the word "island" was feminine, which explains why most of the Greek island names are feminine (η Μύκονος, η Σύρος, η Νάξος etc). So sometimes we take this ancient Greek origin and we also use the ancient Greek plural for the word "island". However, we do not keep the ancient article for plural (αἱ), but the modern Greek one (οι). So you will see "τα Κανάρια Νησιά" and also "οι Κανάριες Νήσοι" or "οι Νήσοι Φερόε". Keep up the good work!

  • @abrahamlovesjesus
    @abrahamlovesjesus 9 місяців тому

    Please upload more videos