The heritage speaker profile
Millions of people of Greek descent in the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, and beyond grew up hearing Greek at home without formal schooling in it. The result is a lopsided skill set: listening comprehension near B2 or higher, speaking somewhere around A2–B1, and reading often at A1. Standard courses fit this profile badly: beginner classes bore you, advanced classes assume literacy you don’t have yet.
A reading path that respects what you already know
- Lock in the alphabet properly. Even if you can slowly decode, spend two focused days with the alphabet until sounding out is effortless. Everything after this gets easier.
- Start reading below your listening level. Begin with A2 stories even though they feel “too easy” spoken. You are not learning the language; you are mapping a language you already know onto letters. That mapping goes fast: heritage speakers typically climb a reading level in weeks, not months.
- Read with audio, always. Hearing the text while you read connects the written form to the Greek already in your ear. This is the single highest-leverage habit for heritage learners.
- Expect a vocabulary surprise at B1–B2. Family Greek covers kitchens, feelings, and village news. Written Greek adds formal and abstract vocabulary you may have never heard. When B1 texts introduce unfamiliar words, that is the gap closing, not you failing.
- Read about your own family’s world. Stories about the island your grandparents left, name days, or the kafeneio keep motivation high and recycle the vocabulary you grew up with.
Common questions
- I speak “village Greek.” Will written Greek feel foreign?
- At first, slightly. Standard Modern Greek differs from regional and diaspora Greek mainly in vocabulary and some verb forms, not in its bones. Reading graded stories is the gentlest bridge, because context makes the standard forms obvious.
- What level should I choose for my first story?
- Start one level below where your listening feels comfortable. If you understand family conversation fully, start at A2 for reading. If a story feels easy, move up. With generated stories, changing level costs nothing.
- Can my kids use the same approach?
- Yes. Second- and third-generation kids are classic heritage learners. Short A1 stories with audio and pictures work well as a shared family-reading routine, and printable readers make it screen-free.
Turn ear-Greek into eye-Greek
Generate stories about the topics your family actually talks about, at the reading level you are at today, with audio to anchor it to the Greek you already own.
Generate a story