The 'spiritus asper' ("rough breathing"), 'dasy pneuma' (Greek: dasy, ''δασύ'') or 'dasia' (Greek: ), is a
diacritical mark used in
Polytonic orthography. It indicates initial aspiration, in other words that the word began with the consonant [h] in
Ancient Greek. It is placed over the initial vowel or, in the case of an initial
diphthong, over the second vowel. In all other cases, the initial vowel or diphthong carries the
spiritus lenis. In addition, it is always placed over an initial or doubled letter
rho.
Examples: stands for ''hymnos'', "hymn", and for ''hrētōr'' (or ''rhētōr''), "orator".
Origin and shape
The origin of the sign is thought to be the left-hand half ( ├ ) of the letter H, which was used in some Greek dialects as an [h] while in others it was used for the vowel
eta. In medieval and modern script, it is written as on top of or to the left of an initial
vowel (the second vowel of a pair comprising a diphthong), and also on an initial
rho or the second of a pair of rhos. It takes the form of an opening half moon (C) or an opening single quotation mark:
★
;
★
.
Use inside a word
In rare cases, it can be written inside a word (other than when the second vowel in a diphthong):
★ on a double
rho in certain editions;
★ when two words contract ("
crasis"), the second word can in some cases keep its spiritus asper. This situation is called 'coronis'.
Other remarks
This mark is encoded as
Unicode U+1FFE.
It has been dropped in the modern
monotonic orthography as the [h] sound has disappeared from
Modern Greek.
Dasea pneumata were also used in the
early Cyrillic alphabet when writing the
Old Church Slavonic language. In this context it is encoded as
Unicode U+0485 or
HTML entity ҅ ( ).
In Latin transcription of
Semitic languages, especially
Arabic and
Hebrew, a symbol similar to the spiritus asper, , U+02BF, is used to represent the letter
ayin.
See also
★
Spiritus lenis
★
Polytonic orthography
★
ʿ
★
Diacritics (Greek alphabet)