

BA Beginners' Modern Greek and Linguistics
About this course
Beginners' Modern Greek and linguistics is a programme that combines language acquisition with the scientific study of language itself, offering an intellectually distinctive path through what might at first seem an unusual pairing. Modern Greek, the language of a nation at the crossroads of European and Mediterranean history, opens access to a rich literary and cultural tradition as well as to a living language spoken across Greece, Cyprus and Greek-speaking communities worldwide. Linguistics, meanwhile, treats language as an object of systematic inquiry, examining how sounds are organised, how meaning is made, how languages change over time and how they shape cognition and social interaction. At the University of Oxford, this four-year full-time programme is designed for students who have not previously studied Modern Greek. It builds your practical language skills to a high level while also requiring you to engage analytically with linguistic theory. The linguistics component covers phonology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics and the history of language, developing rigorous analytical habits that apply across languages, not just Greek. You will also explore the literature and culture of the Greek-speaking world, situating the language within its historical and social context. The typical entry tariff of 200 UCAS points reflects Oxford's highly competitive admissions. Graduates from programmes combining a modern language with linguistics are well prepared for careers that require both communication skills and analytical precision. Translation and interpreting, publishing, the civil service, journalism, international development, language education and heritage work are among the paths graduates follow. The linguistic training also opens routes into computational linguistics, natural language processing, speech technology and language data work, sectors where demand is growing rapidly. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in linguistics, applied linguistics, translation studies or Hellenic studies, and some pursue academic careers in language and literature departments.
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