Mounce, Basics of Biblical Greek, chapter 25.

Slides:



Advertisements
Παρόμοιες παρουσιάσεις
Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek Unit 4: Conjunctions 2013 edition Wilfred E. Major
Advertisements

Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek
Aorist Tense Mounce, Chapters 22 and 23.. Aorist  Simple past tense (all indicative forms have an augment).  Formed in one of two ways (1 st or 2 nd.
Chapter 2: Personal pronouns Verb to be Stephania Savva
AΩ Summer Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 13. Greek Verbs Who is acting Kind (and with Indic, Time) of action Manner in which action is regarded by subject Relation.
Fall Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 15.
Summer Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 14.
Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek
Aorist & Future Passive
Imperfect Tense Mounce, chapter 21.
NT Greek Grammar (Macnair Ch. 1-4)
C.W. Shelmerdine Introduction to Greek 2 nd edition (Newburyport, MA: Focus, 2008) Chapter 5.
Ancient Greek for Everyone: Unit 3: Greek Nouns supplement: Tips on Translating Greek into English GREK 1001 Fall 2013 M-Th 9:30-10:20 Coates 236 Wilfred.
2013 edition Wilfred E. Major
AΩ Fall Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 20. Participles, Tenses & Translation Participle Main Verb PRESENT FUT will be saved PRES are being saved Believing, they.
Public space Domestic space Away from city To city center (market place, palace, etc.)
Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek Unit 2 part 2: Six Common Greek Verbs 2013 edition Wilfred E. Major
2013 edition Wilfred E. Major
Estoy agradecido a Wermuth’s Greekbook por esta presentación de los verbos indicativos.
C.W. Shelmerdine Introduction to Greek 2 nd edition (Newburyport, MA: Focus, 2008) Chapter 4.
Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek
Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek Unit 7 part 3: consonant verb stems 2013 edition Wilfred E. Major
2013 edition Wilfred E. Major
Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek as taught at Louisiana State University Fall 2013 Richard Warga Unit 18: Vocative.
Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek
Verbs The usual three person (1 st, 2 nd and 3 rd ) exist in Greek as in English in singular and plural. verbs change their morphology (mostly their endings)
C.W. Shelmerdine Introduction to Greek 2 nd edition (Newburyport, MA: Focus, 2008) The Perfect System (from Chapters 31-33)
C.W. Shelmerdine Introduction to Greek 2nd edition (Newburyport, MA: Focus, 2008) Chapter 7.
“ Ἡ ἀ γάπη ἀ νυπόκριτος. ἀ ποστυγο ῦ ντες τ ὸ πονηρόν, κολλώμενοι τ ῷ ἀ γαθ ῷ, τ ῇ φιλαδελφί ᾳ ε ἰ ς ἀ λλήλους φιλόστοργοι, τ ῇ τιμ ῇ ἀ λλήλους προηγούμενοι.
Croy—Lesson 22 Liquid Verbs Verbs ending in λ μ ν ρ CLASS REPRESENTATIVES!!!!
AΩ Summer Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 12. Principal Parts BelieveBelievedHave believed HitHitHave hit RunRanHave run GoWentHave gone.
Class II – 1st Aorist Act/Mid Indicative
LAN 402 BEGINNING GREEK II Class II – Aorist and Future Passive & Perfect.
AΩ Summer Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 16. Principal Parts Present Active (Deponent) Future Active (Deponent) Aorist Active (Deponent) Perfect Active.
Class X: Verbal Roots and Imperfect
AΩ Summer Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 15 Fall Greek
Passive Voice. English two voices: active and passive. In the ACTIVE VOICE the subject is the performer of the main action. In the PASSIVE VOICE the subject.
Week 11 Quiz Sentence #2. The sentence. λαλο ῦ μεν ε ἰ δότες ὅ τι ὁ ἐ γείρας τ ὸ ν κύριον Ἰ ησο ῦ ν κα ὶ ἡ μ ᾶ ς σ ὺ ν Ἰ ησο ῦ ἐ γερε ῖ κα ὶ παραστήσει.
Mastering NT Greek 5. Nouns: First Declension 5. Nouns: First Declension By Ted Hildebrandt © 2003 Baker Academic.
LAN 401 BEGINNING GREEK I Class VIII: Contract verbs.
LAN 402 BEGINNING GREEK II Class IX: Imperative. Imperative 1.1 Imperative  In English – second person command You! No inflection  In Greek similar.
Prepositions and Review
Present Middle-Passive Indicative
«φύση» των ΦΕ… και εκπαίδευση στις Φυσικές Επιστήμες
Contract Verbs Introduction to Greek By Stephen Curto
JSIS E 111: Elementary Modern Greek
JSIS E 111: Elementary Modern Greek
Class XI: 2nd Aorist Act/Mid Ind.
Adjectives Introduction to Greek By Stephen Curto For Intro to Greek
Future Active, Future Middle, and the Imperfect Indicative
2013 edition Wilfred E. Major
ΔΙΟΙΚΗΣΗ ΑΝΘΡΩΠΙΝΟΥ ΔΥΝΑΜΙΚΟΥ
Class XI: 2nd Aorist Act/Mid Ind. © Dr. Esa Autero
Επανάληψη σε όλους τους χρόνους
Class X: Verbal Roots and Imperfect © Dr. Esa Autero
Class III Introduction to Participles and Adverbial Participle
Class II – Aorist and Future Passive & Perfect © Dr. Esa Autero
Class IV Aorist Adverbial Participle © Dr. Esa Autero
Pronunciation.
Class II – Aorist and Future Passive & Perfect © Dr. Esa Autero
Verbs.
Class IX: Athematic verbs I © Dr. Esa Autero
Class VIII: Imperative © Dr. Esa Autero
Class VIII: Contract verbs © Dr. Esa Autero
Future Active/Middle Indicative
First Aorist Active/Middle Indicative
Nominative & Accusative Definite Article
1 and 2 Personal Pronouns More third declension stems
Present Active Indicative
Chapter 34 Indicative of δίδωμι.
Μεταγράφημα παρουσίασης:

Mounce, Basics of Biblical Greek, chapter 25. Perfect Tense Mounce, Basics of Biblical Greek, chapter 25.

Aspect & Translation Describes past, completed action with consequences felt in the present (Mounce 25.2). Translate (usually) with helping verb, “Your faith has saved you.” Translate (sometimes) with English present tense, “It is written.”

Forming Perfect Tense Perfect uses primary endings. Perfect is a PRIMARY TENSE. Therefore, perfect does not have an augment. Perfect uses primary endings. --, ς, ε; μεν, τε, σι in active voice. μαι, σαι, ται; μεθα, σθε, νται in middle and passive voice. Perfect has “reduplication” on the front of the stem. Perfect active has a tense formative (κα).

Forming Perfect Tense

Forming Perfect Tense

The Paradigm: Perfect Active Mounce, 25.5 Preposition for Compound Verb + Redupli-cation Perfect Active Tense Stem Tense Formative NO CONNECT-ING VOWEL Primary Active Personal Endings λε λυ κα --  λέλυκα ς λέλυκας κε -- (ν) λέλυκε(ν) μεν λελύκαμεν τε λελύκατε σι(ν) λελύκασι(ν)

The Paradigm: Perfect Middle/Passive Mounce, 25.7 Preposition for Compound Verb + Redupli-cation Perfect M/P Tense Stem NO TENSE FORMA-TIVE NO CONNECT-ING VOWEL Primary Active Personal Endings λε λυ μαι  λέλυμαι σαι λέλυσαι ται λέλυται μεθα λελύμεθα σθε λέλυσθε νται λέλυνται

Recognizing Reduplication Stem begins with a consonant: it duplicates with vowel, ε, between; e.g. λύω to λέλυκα. Stem begins with a vowel: it lengthens; e.g. ἀγαπάω to ἠγάπηκα. Stem begins with two consonants: vowel usually is added before the two consonants; e.g. γινώσκω to ἔγνωκα. Compound verb: stem letter reduplicates, not the preposition letter; e.g. ἐκβάλλω to ἐκβέβληκα.

Perfect Forms in “Top 20” List Present Active 1st Principal Part Perfect Active 4th Principal Part Perfect Middle/Passive 5th Principal Part ἀκούω ἀκήκοα ἤκουσμαι ἔχω ἔσχηκα -- λέγω εἴρηκα εἴρημαι ἔρχομαι ἐλήλυθα ἀποστέλλω ἀπέσταλκα ἀπέσταλμαι γινώσκω ἔγνωκα ἔγνωσμαι ἐγείρω ἐγήγερμαι ὁράω ἑώρακα ὦμμαι ἀποθνῄσκω τέθνηκα βάλλω βέβληκα βέβλημαι γίνομαι γέγονα γεγένημαι εὑρίσκω εὕρηκα εὔρημαι λαμβάνω εἴληφα εἴλημμαι γράφω γέγραφα γέγραμμαι ἄγω ἦχα ἦγμαι