Class IX: Present Middle/Passive Ind. and Future Active/Middle Ind.

Slides:



Advertisements
Παρόμοιες παρουσιάσεις
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.
Advertisements

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.
Greek Verbs. Present Tense The Present Tense is formed from the first principle part of any verb. κελεύω, κελεύσω, ἐκέλευσα, κεκέλευκα, κεκέλευσμαι, ἐκελεύσθην.
Aorist & Future Passive
Imperfect Tense Mounce, chapter 21.
AΩ Fall Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 20. Participles, Tenses & Translation Participle Main Verb PRESENT FUT will be saved PRES are being saved Believing, they.
Fall Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 19.
Estoy agradecido a Wermuth’s Greekbook por esta presentación de los verbos indicativos.
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
Class IV – Third Declension nouns
AΩ Summer Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 15 Fall Greek
AΩ Fall Greek 2003 Croy Lesson 21. Contract Verbs ANALYZE (PNTMV or GNCTV) forms of λαλεω = to speak ἐ λαλησαμεν ἐ λαλησαμεν ἐ λαληθη ἐ λαληθη λαλησω.
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.
Ancient Greek for Everyone: A New Digital Resource for Beginning Greek Unit 3 part 2: Feminine Nouns 2015 edition Wilfred E. Major
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 3. Present Active Indicative Verb By Ted Hildebrandt © 2003 Baker Academic.
Mastering NT Greek 4. Nouns: Second Declension 4. Nouns: Second Declension By Ted Hildebrandt © 2003 Baker Academic.
Unit 11. Imperatives Another verbal mood in Greek is the Imperative mood. Another verbal mood in Greek is the Imperative mood. Imperative mood expresses.
Mastering NT Greek 5. Nouns: First Declension 5. Nouns: First Declension By Ted Hildebrandt © 2003 Baker Academic.
Mastering NT Greek 10. Shocking the Future 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.
Chapter 1(a) What I expect you to know…. Vocabulary Verbs: ̉έστι(ν), λέϒει, οι̉κει̂, πονει̂, ϕιλει̂, χαίρει Nouns: ο͑ α̉ργός, ο͑ ά̉νθρωπος, ο͑ αυ̉τουργός,
Prepositions and Review
Class IX: Present Middle/Passive Ind. and Future Active/Middle Ind.
Present Middle-Passive Indicative
Genitive and Dative Nouns
Nominative and Accusative Nouns and THE Definite Article
Contract Verbs Introduction to Greek By Stephen Curto
Class X: Athematic verbs II
Class XI: 2nd Aorist Act/Mid Ind.
Adjectives Introduction to Greek By Stephen Curto For Intro to Greek
Third Declension Nouns
Future Active, Future Middle, and the Imperfect Indicative
2013 edition Wilfred E. Major
Personal Pronouns Introduction to Greek By Stephen Curto
Class V: Personal Pronouns and 3rd Decl. Cont.
Class VII: Relative Pronouns; Pr. Ind.Verbs
Class IIIa: Prepositions and “to be”
Class V: Personal Pronouns and 3rd Decl. Cont. (chs )
Class II: English and Greek Nouns © Dr. Esa Autero
Class VII: Relative Pronouns; Present Indicative Verbs
Class IX: Present Middle/Passive Ind. and Future Active/Middle Ind.
Class XI: 2nd Aorist Act/Mid Ind. © Dr. Esa Autero
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
Class II – Aorist and Future Passive & Perfect © Dr. Esa Autero
Verbs.
Personal Pronouns.
Review.
Class VII: Infinitive © Dr. Esa Autero
Grk 101, ch6 civ.
Class IX: Athematic verbs I © Dr. Esa Autero
Class VIII: Imperative © Dr. Esa Autero
Class X: Athematic verbs II © Dr. Esa Autero
Chapter 32 Infinitive.
Class VIII: Contract verbs © Dr. Esa Autero
Future Active/Middle Indicative
First Aorist Active/Middle Indicative
Nominative & Accusative Definite Article
Perfective (Aorist) Adverbial Participle
Present Active Indicative
Chapter 34 Indicative of δίδωμι.
Verbs (Indicative).
Μεταγράφημα παρουσίασης:

Class IX: Present Middle/Passive Ind. and Future Active/Middle Ind. LAN 401 Beginning Greek I Class IX: Present Middle/Passive Ind. and Future Active/Middle Ind.

Present Middle and Passive Indicative 1.1 Introduction to Voice There are two voices in English Active – subject performs the action Peter sees the messenger Passive - subject is being acted upon The messenger is being seen by Peter

Present Middle and Passive Indicative 1.2 Voice in Greek Greek has three voices Active Passive Middle Active - subject performs the action ὁ Πέτρος βλέπει τὸν ἄγγελον [The] Peter sees the angel/messenger

Present Middle and Passive Indicative Passive - subject is being acted upon by an agent ἄγγελος βλέπεται ὑπὸ τοῦ Πετροῦ Angel is being seen by [the] Peter Middle - subject participates in the action ὁ ἄγγελος βλέπεται The angel sees himself

Present Middle and Passive Indicative Greek passive and middle voice (pr. ind.) Same form Use context to determine translation To form middle and passive forms: Present stem+ connecting vowel + Mid/Pass. ending λυ- ο- μαι = λύομαι I am loosing myself (Mid.)/ I am being loosed

Present Middle and Passive Indicative Pr. Mid. Sing. Pl. λύομαι I am loosing myself λύομεθα We are loosing ourselves λύῃ [λυ+ε+σαι > λυεαι > λυηι > λύῃ] You are loosing yourself λύεσθε You are loosing yourselves λύεται He is loosing himself λύονται They are loosing themselves Infinitive λύεσθαι To be loosing oneself

Present Middle and Passive Indicative Pr. Pass. Sing. Pl. λύομαι I am being loosed λύομεθα We are being loosed λύῃ You are being loosed λύεσθε λύεται He is being loosed λύονται They are being loosed Infinitive λύεσθαι To be loosed

Present Middle and Passive Indicative 2.1 Function of the middle voice Several shades of meaning – the basic ones are: (a) Direct Middle The reflexive use – nearest to basic idea ὁ ἄνθρωπος ἐγείρεται The man raises himself up

Present Middle and Passive Indicative The reciprocal use – a plural subject engages in an interchange of action οἱ ἄνθτρωποι διδάσκονται The men are teaching one another (b) Indirect Middle Subject is acting with reference to itself OR on behalf of itself λαμβάνεται δῶρα She is taking for herself gifts

Present Middle and Passive Indicative (c) Intensive Middle The stress is on the agent producing the action - use “self” διδάσκεται τὴν ἀλήθειαν He himself is teaching the truth (Nobody else is teaching)

Present Middle and Passive Indicative (d) Deponent/Defective Middle Defective/deponent – appear in the middle but active in function ἔρχομαι ἐκ τῆς ἐκκλησίας I come from the church Deponent – always looks like pass/mid. Always active in meaning Recognition – check lexical form Always listed with mid/pass ending Parsing – ‘deponent’ or ‘middle’

Present Middle and Passive Indicative 2.2 Function of the Passive Voice Four distinct uses of passive in Greek (a) Direct Agent - most common usage in NT Preposition ὑπο with gen. case διδάσκεται ὑπὸ τοῦ ἀγγέλου He is being taught by the angel

Present Middle and Passive Indicative (b) Intermediate agent Preposition δία with genitive case πάντα δι’ αὐτοῦ ἐγένετο All things through him were made John 1:3  Christ is the intermediary agent ; God is the original agent

Present Middle and Passive Indicative (c) Impersonal agent Instrumental case with or without the preposition ἐν οἱ ἄντθρωποι σῳζονται ἐν τῶ λόγῳ τοῦ Μεσσίου The men are being saved by the word of the Messiah (d) No agent expressed ἐγείρεται He is being raised up

Present Middle and Passive Indicative 2.3 Present Mid/pass. Contract forms - άω - έω - όω Sg. 1 ἀγαπῶμαι ποιοῦμαι πληροῦμαι Sg. 2 ἀγαπᾷ ποιῇ πληροῖ Sg. 3 ἀγαπᾶται ποιεῖται πληροῦται Pl. 1 ἀγαπώμεθα ποιούμεθα πληρούμεθα Pl. 2 ἀγαπᾶσθε ποιεῖσθε πληροῦσθε Pl. 3 ἀγαπῶνται ποιοῦνται πληροῦνται

Present Middle and Passive Indicative 3.1 The Cases for Object of Verbs Regular case for direct object is accusative Some Greek verbs take objects in other genitive or dative dat. ἀποκρίνομαι τοῖς τέκνοις – I am answering the children ἐπιστεύσεν δὲ Αβραὰμ τῶ θεῶ - Abraham believed God inf. ἄρχομαι βλέπειν - I am beginning to see gen. ἀκούω τοῦ λόγου – I am hearing the word

Present Middle and Passive Indicative Practice: p. 67 Warm-up Parsing

Future Active/Middle Indicative Introduction – Future tense in English To form a future tense in English: “shall” or “will” to the present verb “shall” is rarely used today [for 1st person] I eat I will eat

Future Active and Middle Indicative 4.1 Future Forms – Active and Middle 4.1.1 Forming future tense Future active and middle are built on present stem Future passive is built on different stem! Future tense – strongest time emphasis of Greek tenses Basic idea (Pattern 1) Active: λυ (present stem)-σ (tense formative) –ω (active ending) = λυ-σ-ω λύσω (I will loose)

Future Active Indicative Singular Plural λύσω I will loose λύσομεν We will loose λύσεις You will loose λύσετε λύσει (s)he/it will loose λύσουσι(ν) They will loose Infinitive λύσειν To loose

Future Active/Middle Indicative 4.2 Contract Verbs and minor irregularities The contract vowel lengthens before tense formative ἀγαπα + σ + ω > ἀγαπήσω ποιε +σ + ω > ποιήσω πληρο + σ + ω > πληρώσω

Future Active/Middle Indicative Other exceptions follow a familiar pattern: βλεπ + σω > βλέψω Labial: πσ, βσ, φσ > ψ γραφ + σω > γράψω διωκ +σω > διώξω Velar: κσ, γσ, χσ > ξ αγ+σω > ἄξω βαπτιδ + σω > βαπτίσω Dental: τσ, δσ, θσ > σ πειθ +σω > πείσω

Future Active/Middle Indicative 5.1 Future Middle Indicative Middle voice is different from active and passive in the future! (cf. present)  Future middle: future active stem but mid/pass. endings! Future Middle: λυ (present stem)-σ (tense formative)-ομαι (Middle ending) = λυ-σ-ομαι  λύσομαι (I will loose myself)

Future Middle Indicative Singular Plural λύσομαι I will loose myself λυσόμεθα We will loose ourselves λύσῃ you will loose yourself λύσεσθε You will loose yourselves λύσεται He/she/it will loose himself λύσονται They will loose themselves

Future active and Middle Indicative 5.2 Future Indicative of εἰμί εἰμί has no middle or passive function in the future tense Singular Plural ἔσομαι I will be ἐσόμεθα We will be ἔσῃ You will be ἔσεσθε ἔσται (s)he/it will be ἔσονται They will be

Future active and Middle Indicative 5.3 Overview of Greek Tenses Five tenses (and seven forms) of koine Greek Lexicon listing – sg.1 in the 5-7 basic tenses/forms of the verb E.g. λύω [pr.], λύσω [fut.act.], ἔλυσα [aor.act.], λέλυκα [pf.act.], λέλυμαι [pf.mid/pass.], ἐλύθην [aor.pass.] Greek Tense/voice Translation ἀγαπάω Present I love ἠγάπων Imperfect I was loving ἀγαπήσω Future active I will love ἠγάπησα Aorist active I loved ἠγάπηκα Perfect active I have loved ἠγάπημαι Perfect passive I have been loved ἠγαπήθην Aorist passive I was loved

Future Active/Middle Indicative Practice: p. 71 Warm-up and parsing Homework: p. 69, no: 7-9 p. 73, no: 7-10