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Aug 15, 2006
“Signal Flags” for Greek Verbal Forms
The “Signal Flags” chart is a systematic “visual tour” of many of the possible characteristics seen within various Greek verbal forms that one encounters in their various tenses, voices, and modes. One or more of these “clues” may be spotted simultaneously by the student, giving him the mental “signal(s)” he needs to help him more quickly to identify that form’s parsing. Notice that the chart is a simulated left-to-right look at any verbal form (including participles and infinitives) that one might encounter, noting the various characteristics to watch for at progressive locations within the word’s structure. Once the “signal flag” clue has been identified, the corresponding tense(s), voice(s), and mode(s) can be traced to the right-hand side of the chart, where a final determination should be possible. While not intended to be an exhaustive overview of the various Greek verbal characteristics, this chart presents most of the regularly occurring ones.
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Aug 14, 2006
GREEKBOOK
While there are quite a few more Greek prepositions than these, the visual below concentrates on the ones having directional or positional functions. Many English words are also derived from these particular Greek prepositions, including: apostasy, catacomb, diameter, enshrine and envelope, epidermis, exit and exodus, hypercritical, hypodermic, parallel, and perimeter.
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Aug 11, 2006
GREEKBOOK
Wermuth’s GREEKBOOK is packed with the information you need to begin your study of Koiné Greek nouns. Below you will find a sample of the
GREEKBOOK’s noun coverage, including the nouns declensions chart.
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Aug 9, 2006
<i>GREEKBOOK</i>
Wermuth’s GREEKBOOK is packed with the information you need to begin your study of Koiné Greek verbs. The following is just a taste of how
GREEKBOOK addresses topics related to verbs, including samples of the innovative, easy to use charts that serve to clarify the topic.
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