That's Greek to me or it's (all) Greek to me is an idiom in English referring to material that the speaker finds difficult or impossible to understand. It is commonly used in reference to a complex or imprecise verbal or written expression, that may use unfamiliar jargon, dialect, or symbols. The metaphor refers to the Greek language, which is unfamiliar to most English speakers, and additionally uses a largely dissimilar alphabet.

Origins

It may have been a direct translation of a similar phrase in Latin: Graecum est, non legitur ("it is Greek, [therefore] it cannot be read").[1] The phrase is widely believed to have its origins among medieval scribes. While most scribes were familiar with Latin, few people in medieval Western Europe, even among the intellectual classes, were schooled in Greek. When copying classic manuscripts they would frequently encounter passages and quotations in Greek which they would have no way of translating, and as such would note the phrase in the margins.

Recorded usage of the metaphor in English traces back to the early modern period. It appears in 1599 in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, as spoken by Servilius Casca to Cassius after a festival in which Caesar was offered a crown:

CASSIUS: Did Cicero say any thing?

CASCA: Ay, he spoke Greek.

CASSIUS: To what effect?

CASCA: Nay, an I tell you that, I'll ne'er look you i' the face again: but those that understood him smiled at one another and shook their heads; but, for mine own part, it was Greek to me. I could tell you more news too: Marullus and Flavius, for pulling scarfs off Caesar's images, are put to silence. Fare you well. There was more foolery yet, if I could remember it.

Here, Casca's literal ignorance of Greek is the source of the phrase, using its common meaning to play on the uncertainty among the conspirators about Cicero's attitude to Caesar's increasingly regal behaviour.

Shakespeare was not the only author of this period to use the expression. It was also used in 1603 by Thomas Dekker in his play Patient Grissel:

FAR: Asking for a Greek poet, to him he fails. I'll be sworn he knows not so much as one character of the tongue.
RIC: Why, then it's Greek to him.

The expression is almost exclusively used with reference to the speaker (generally "Greek to me"); Dekker's "Greek to him" is rare.

Variations

Other languages have similar formulations, some referring to Greek but many referring to foreign languages such as Chinese or Spanish. Many refer to a language with different alphabet or writing system.

This is an example of the usage of demonyms in relation to the ability of a people to be understood, comparable to the development of the words barbarian (one who babbles), Nemec (Slavic for "the mute one," indicating Germans).

In an article published by Arnold L. Rosenberg in the language journal Lingvisticæ Investigationes, he claimed that there was a popular "consensus" that Chinese was the "hardest" language, since various non-English languages most frequently used the Chinese language in their equivalent expression to the English idiom "it's all Greek to me".[2] David Moser of the University of Michigan Center for Chinese Studies reached a similar conclusion.[3]

LanguagePhrasePronunciationTranslationTarget language / meaning
EnglishIt's Double Dutch.Double Dutch (Tutnese)
That's Greek to me.Greek
Chicken scratch.illegible writing
AlbanianMos fol kinezce.Do not speak Chinese.Chinese
AfrikaansDis Grieks vir my.It's Greek to me.Greek
Arabicيتحدث باللغة الصينيةyataḥaddaṯ bil-luġah aṣ-Ṣīnīyah
[jataˈħadːaθ bɪlˈluɣa asˤːiːˈniːja]
He's speaking Chinese.Chinese
The verb in the example can be conjugated in other forms.
Arabic, Syrian Colloquialيحكي كرشونيyaḥki Karšūni
[ˈjaħki karˈʃuːni]
He's speaking Syriac.Syriac, using the Garshuni (Arabic) script as a reference to it.
The verb in the example can be conjugated in other forms.
Arabic, Egyptian Colloquialبيتكلم بالهنديbyatkallam bel-hendi
[bjætˈkælːæm belˈhendi]
He's speaking Hindi.Hindi
The verb in the example can be conjugated in other forms.
AsturianSuename chinu
Ta'n chinu.
It sounds like Chinese to me.
It's in Chinese.
Chinese
BulgarianВсе едно ми говориш на патагонски.Vse edno mi govoriš na patagonski.
[fsɛ ɛdˈnɔ mi ɡɔˈvɔriʃ na pataˈɡɔnskʲi]
It's as if you're talking in Patagonian."Patagonian"
Cantonese呢個係咪鬼畫符呀? / 呢个系咪鬼画符呀?li1 go3 hai6 mai6 gwai2 waak6 fu4 aa3
[liː˥ kɔ˧ hɐi˨ mɐi˨ kwɐi˧˥ waːk̚˨ fuː˨˩ aː˧]
Is this ghost script?"ghost script"
Refers to illegible handwriting.
CatalanCom si diguessis Llúcia[kom si di'ɣes:is 'ʎusiə]As if you say Lucy; not referring to a language
CebuanoLinatinLatinLatin, a language used in rituals by holy men such as Catholic priests, faith healers, and talisman owners.
IninsikChineseChinese
ChavacanoAleman ese comigo.It's German to me.German
CroatianTo su za mene španska sela.[ su za měne ʃpǎːnska sêla]These are to me the Spanish countryside.Spanish
CzechTo je pro mě španělská vesnice.[ˈto ˈpro mɲɛ ˈʃpaɲɛlskaː ˈvɛsɲɪtsɛ]This is a Spanish village to me.Spanish
DanishDet rene volapyk.[te̝ ˈʁeˀnə volɑˈpʰyk]This is pure VolapükVolapük, a 19th century constructed language
Det er en by i Rusland.This is a town in Russia.Russian
Kaudervælsk Romansh Romansh, a Rhaeto-Romance language spoken in Switzerland
DutchDat is Chinees voor mij.[dɑt ɪs ʃiˈneːs foːr mɛi][4]That is Chinese to me.Chinese
Ik snap er geen jota van.I don't understand one iota of it. Reference to Matthew 5:18.[5]Greek
EsperantoTio estas volapukaĵo.[ˈtio ˈestas volapuˈkaʒo]It's all Volapük.Volapük, a 19th century constructed language
EstonianSee on mulle hiina keel.This is Chinese to me.Chinese
FilipinoParang IntsikIt looks like Chinese.Chinese
FinnishTäyttä hepreaa.[ˈtæy̯tːæ ˈhepreɑː]It's all Hebrew.Hebrew
Kuulostaa siansaksaltaSounds like pig's Germangibberish
harakanvarpaita (refers to undecipherable writing)Magpie's toesunintelligible writing (gibberish)
FrenchC'est du chinois.
C'est de l'hébreu.
C'est du russe.
[s‿ɛ dy ʃinwa]
[s‿ɛ də l‿ebʁø]
[s‿ɛ dy ʁys]
It's Chinese.
It's Hebrew.
It's Russian.
Chinese
Hebrew
Russian
GermanDas kommt mir spanisch vor.That sounds like Spanish to me. (usually meant to indicate something is fishy)Spanish
Spreche ich Chinesisch?Am I speaking Chinese?Chinese
Fachchinesischspecialty Chinese (meaning technical jargon)Chinese
Kauderwelschtrade RomanceMediterranean Lingua Franca
Das sind böhmische Dörfer für mich[ˌbøːmɪʃə ˈdœʁfɐ]These are Bohemian villages to meCzech, Bohemia being a region of the neighbouring Czech Republic that is nearest to Germany.
Ich verstehe nur BahnhofAll I understand is "train station."
Polnisch rückwärtsPolish [spoken] in reversePolish
Greek, Standard ModernΑυτά μου φαίνονται κινέζικα.[afˈta mu ˈfenɔːnde ciˈnezika]This strikes me as ChineseChinese
Αυτά μου φαίνονται αλαμπουρνέζικα.[afˈta mu ˈfeno(n)de ala(m)burˈnezika]These seem to me gobbledygook."Alaburnese" (similar to gibberish)
Greek, CypriotΕν τούρτζικα που μιλάς;[e‿ˈⁿduɾ̥t͡ʃi̞kɐ p̬u mi↗ˈlɐs]Are you speaking Turkish?Turkish
Hebrewזה סינית בשבילי[ze sinit biʃvili]It's Chinese to me!Chinese
כתב חרטומים[ktav ħartˤumim]The script of a pharaoh's magicians (i.e. hieroglyphics)Hieroglyphics
Hindi,

Urdu

क्या मैं फ़ारसी बोल रहा हूँ?

کیا میں فارسی بول رہا ہوں؟

Kyā maĩ fārsī bol rahā hū̃? Am I speaking Persian? Persian
HungarianEz nekem kínai.[ˈɛz ˈnɛkɛm ˈkiːnɒi]It's Chinese to me.Chinese
IcelandicHrognamál[ˈr̥ɔknaˌmauːl̥]"fish-egg language"
Þetta er hebreska fyrir mér.[ˈθɛhtɑ ɛr ˈhɛːprɛska ˈfɪːrɪr mjɛːr̥]This is Hebrew to me.Hebrew
Indonesian(Tulisan) Cakar ayamChicken feetgibberish
Refers to unreadable writing.
Bahasa planet(Other-)planet languagealien language
ItalianQuesto per me è arabo/aramaico/ostrogoto/turco/cinese[ˈkwesto per ˈme ˌɛ ˈaːrabo], [araˈmaiko], [ostroˈɡɔːto], [ˈtu:rko], [tʃiˈne:ze]This is Arabic/Aramaic/Ostrogoth/Turkish/Chinese to meArabic, Aramaic, Ostrogoth, Turkish, Chinese
Japanese珍紛漢紛Chinpun kanpun
[ˈtɕimpɯŋkamˌpɯɴ]
"Ching chong"formal speech
Refers to the "Chinese" sound of incomprehensible Chinese loanwords.
Javaneseꦕꦺꦏꦺꦂꦥꦶꦛꦶꦏ꧀[t͡ʃɛkɛr piʈɪˀ]Chicken scratchillegible handwriting
ꦧꦱꦮꦭꦺꦴꦟ꧀ꦝ[bʰɔsɔ walɔɳɖɔ]Dutch languageDutch
Korean횡설수설하고 있다Hoengseolsuseolhago ittaThey are speaking horizontally and vertically.gibberish, especially for unrecognizable spoken language or incoherence.
괴발개발
(refers to unreadable writing)
GoebalgaebalCat's footprints and dog's footprintsgibberish
아무 말이나 한다Amu marina handaThey are speaking out random words.gibberish
외계어를 한다Oegyeeoreul handaThey are speaking in an alien language.alien language
개소리를 한다Gaesorireul handaThey are making a dog's sound.gibberish
LatinGraecum est; nōn legitur[ˈɡrae̯kum est noːn ˈleɡitur][It] is Greek; [it is] not legible/[it is] illegibleGreek
LatvianTā man ir ķīniešu ābece[taː man ir ciːnieʃu aːbetse]This is Chinese alphabet book to meChinese
LithuanianTai man kaip kinų kalba.[taɪ mɐn kaɪp kinuˑ kɐlba]It's Chinese to meChinese
Lojbanti itku'ile ga'a mi[6][7]It's Ithkuil to meIthkuil
MacedonianЗа мене тоа е шпанско село.Za mene toa e špansko selo.
[za mɛnɛ tɔa ɛ ʃpaŋskɔ sɛlɔ]
It is for me a Spanish village.Spanish
Malay(Tulisan) Cakar ayamChicken feetgibberish
Refers to unreadable writing.
Mandarin看起來像天書。/ 看起来像天书。Kànqǐlái xiàng tiān shū
[kʰan˥˩ tɕʰi˨˩ lai̯˧˥ ɕjɑŋ˥˩ tʰjɛn˥ ʂu˥]
Looks like a book from Heaven"Heaven's language"
Refers to an unknown writing system, or god's language, c.f. A Book from the Sky.
這是鬼畫符嗎? / 这是鬼画符吗?Zhè shì guǐhuàfú ma?
[ʈʂɤ˥˩ ʂɻ̩˥˩ kwei˨˩ hwa˥˩ fu˧˥ ma˧]
Are these ghost-drawn marks?"ghost language"
Refers to very poor, incomprehensible handwriting.
聽起來像鳥語。/ 听起来像鸟语。Tīngqǐlái xiàng niǎoyǔ.
[tʰiŋ˥ tɕʰi˨˩ lai̯˧˥ ɕjɑŋ˥˩ njɑʊ̯˧˥ y˨˩]
Sounds like bird language.
"bird language" (bird song)
Refers to incomprehensible speech.
火星文Huǒxīng wén
[xwɔ˨˩ ɕiŋ˥ wən˧˥]
Martian writing"Martian"
Usually refers to comically unconventional writing, but is also often used in the same context of unintelligible words or text.
Low SaxonDat kümmt mi spaansch vör.[dat kymt miː spoːnʃ føɐ]That seems like Spanish to me.Spanish
NorwegianDet er helt gresk for meg.It's complete Greek to meGreek
Persianمگه ترکی حرف میزنم؟[mæge torkiː hærf miːzænæm]Am I speaking Turkish?Turkish
PolishTo dla mnie chińszczyzna.[ˈtɔ dla ˈmɲɛ xʲij̃ˈʂtʂɨzna]To me it's ChineseChinese
Siedzieć jak na tureckim kazaniu[ˈɕɛdʑɛtɕ ˈjak na tuˈrɛtskʲim kaˈzaɲu]Sit as in a Turkish sermonTurkish
Czeski film[ˈtʂɛskʲi ˈfilm]Czech movie (this one refers to an incomprehensible situation rather than words, coined after a wave of absurdist movies in Czech cinematography)Czech
PortugueseIsto para mim é chinês.[ˈiʃtu pɐɾɐ ˈmĩ ɛ ʃiˈneʃ]This is Chinese to meChinese (Portugal)
Isto para mim é grego.[ˈiʃtu pɐɾɐ ˈmĩ ɛ ˈɣɾeɣu]This is Greek to meGreek (Portugal)
RomanianParcă e chineză.
[ˈparkə je kiˈnezə]It's like Chinese.Chinese
Ești turc?[jeʃtʲ ˈtuɾk]Are you Turkish?Turkish
Nu înțeleg o iotă. [nu ɨnˈt͡se.leɡ o jo.tə] I don't understand one iota of it. Reference to Matthew 5:18. Greek
RussianЭто для меня китайская грамота.Eto dlja menjá kitájskaja grámota.
[ˈɛtə ˈdʲlʲæ mʲɪˈnʲæ kʲɪˈtajskəjə ˈɡramətə]
That's Chinese writing to me.Chinese, but emphasis is put on reading rather than speaking. The phrase is often applied when not understanding branches of knowledge like chemistry, maths or computing due to lack of familiarity.
Как курица лапой.Like [scribbled by] chicken feet.gibberish
Refers to very poor, incomprehensible handwriting.
SerbianТо су за мене шпанска села.
To su za mene španska sela.
[to su za mene ʃpanska sela]These are to me a Spanish village.Spanish
К'о да кинески причаш.
K'o da kineski pričaš.
Like speaking in ChineseChinese
SlovakTo je pre mňa španielska dedina.[to je pre mɲa ʃpaɲielska ɟeɟina]That is a Spanish village to me.Spanish
SloveneTo mi je španska vas[ˈtóː mi ˈʃpáːnska ˈʋáːs]That is a Spanish village to me.Spanish
SpanishEstá en chino/arameo/ruso.
Me suena a chino/arameo/ruso.
[esˈta en ˈtʃino], [aɾaˈmeo]
[me ˈswena a ˈtʃino], [aɾaˈmeo]
This is in Chinese/Aramaic/Russian.
It sounds like Chinese/Aramaic/Russian to me.
Chinese, Aramaic, Russian
No entiendo ni jota[no enˈtjendo ni ˈxota]I don't understand one iota of it.
Reference to Matthew 5:18.[8]
Greek
SwedishDet är rena grekiskan.[ˈdeː æ ˈrěːna ˈɡrěːkɪskan]It's pure GreekGreek
TurkishKonuya Fransız kaldım.[9][konuja fɾansɯz kaɫˈdɯm]I am French to the topic.French, as from the viewpoint of a French person who doesn't understand any Turkish.
Anladıysam arap olayım.[10][anɫaˈdɯjsam aˈɾap oɫajɯm]let me blacken, get dark skin ("turn into Arab") if I understood it
(in Turkish "arap olayım" is used in idioms in similar sense to "God strike me down if ...", to emphasize that something is not true)[11]
(informal, old-fashioned, offensive)[12]
None (Arab doesn't refer to nationality or language, but skin color)
UkrainianЦе для мене китайська грамота.Tse dlja mene kitajs'ka gramota.
[ˈtsɛ dʲlʲɐ ˈmɛne kɪˈtɑjsʲkɐ ˈɦrɑmotɐ]
That's Chinese writing to me.Chinese
VenetianPar mi xe turco.[paɾ ˈmi ˌzɛ ˈtuɾko]To me this is Turkish.Turkish
VietnameseNhìn/nghe như tiếng Miên.(It) looks/sounds like KhmerKhmer
Yiddishתּרגום־לשון
טערקיש
אָץ־קוצץ־לשון
מלאָכים־לשון
חרטמים־לשון
targem-loshn
terkish
ots-koytsets-loshn
malokhim-loshn
khartumim-loshn
targum language (i.e. that of Aramaic translations of the Bible)
Turkish
gibberish
the language of angels
the language of a pharaoh's magicians (i.e. hieroglyphics)
Aramaic / Turkish / gibberish / angelic language / Hieroglyphics

See also

References

  1. "Etymology of Gringo". 17 April 2011. Retrieved 7 November 2021. The same phrase ["It was Greek to me"] was also used (at about the same time) by another Elizabethan playwright, Thomas Dekker, but its origins are much older: it comes from the Medieval Latin proverb Graecum est; non potest legi (i.e., "It is Greek; it cannot be read").
  2. Rosenberg, Arnold L. (January 1979). "The Hardest Natural Languages". Lingvisticæ Investigationes. 3 (2): 323–339. doi:10.1075/li.3.2.07ros. ISSN 0378-4169.
  3. Moser, D. Pīnyīn.Info. Why Chinese Is So Damn Hard. Retrieved Jun 4, 2011, http://www.pinyin.info/readings/texts/moser.html Archived 2011-05-21 at the Wayback Machine
  4. In isolation, voor is pronounced [voːr].
  5. "Ergens geen jota van snappen". Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2015-12-17.
  6. Glosbe at the word itku'ile
  7. Note also a related occurrence: Rachel Gardener's “lo nabmi” (“The problem”) song at 00:27: “.i .ia nadme'a fa la .itku'ile .'enai” (“I think Ithkuil would be easier than this”).
  8. Morcillo, José Juan. "Biblismos". La Tribuna de Albacete.
  9. "Güncel Türkçe Sözlük'te Söz Arama" (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 2007-09-26. Retrieved 2012-01-19.
  10. "Hürriyet Arama". Archived from the original on 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2012-11-27.
  11. "Güncel Türkçe Sözlük'te Söz Arama" (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 2016-04-05. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  12. ""Anladıysam Arap olayım" sözü rafa mı kalkıyor?" (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 2021-06-24. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
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