Elements of the Greek LanguageD. Appleton & Company, 1869 - 246 Seiten |
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... Attic Second Decl . First Declension ( A - Decl . ) Second Declension ( O - Decl . ) Third Declension ( Cons . - Decl . ) Classified List of Verbs 290 75 78 Special Formation of Verbs • 82 Alphabetical List 300 • 84 Labial and Palatal ...
... Attic Second Decl . First Declension ( A - Decl . ) Second Declension ( O - Decl . ) Third Declension ( Cons . - Decl . ) Classified List of Verbs 290 75 78 Special Formation of Verbs • 82 Alphabetical List 300 • 84 Labial and Palatal ...
Seite 1
... Attic birth . As used by such writers , with more or less variation from the pure Athenian idiom , it is called the Common Dialect . Of the prose literature of Greece , all but a small fraction belongs either to the Attic , strict- ly ...
... Attic birth . As used by such writers , with more or less variation from the pure Athenian idiom , it is called the Common Dialect . Of the prose literature of Greece , all but a small fraction belongs either to the Attic , strict- ly ...
Seite 6
... Attic Greek ; yet many Attic forms can only be explained by noticing its earlier existence . EUPHONY OF VOWELS . Vowels Interchanged . 14. The open 6 [ 7 SEMIVOWELS . MUTES . DOUBLE CONSONANTS .
... Attic Greek ; yet many Attic forms can only be explained by noticing its earlier existence . EUPHONY OF VOWELS . Vowels Interchanged . 14. The open 6 [ 7 SEMIVOWELS . MUTES . DOUBLE CONSONANTS .
Seite 11
... Attic writers , where the earlier have ρσ : thus θάρρος courage for earlier Attic θάρσος . 34. σ is often dropped between two vowels , which are then contracted . Thus ( γενεσ - ος , γενε - ος ) γένους of race ; ( λυε - σαι , λυε - αι ) ...
... Attic writers , where the earlier have ρσ : thus θάρρος courage for earlier Attic θάρσος . 34. σ is often dropped between two vowels , which are then contracted . Thus ( γενεσ - ος , γενε - ος ) γένους of race ; ( λυε - σαι , λυε - αι ) ...
Seite 12
... Attic ear , was often endured in prose : often , how- ever , it was avoided by crasis , or elision , or the addition of a movable con- sonant . Crasis and elision occur especially when the first of the two words is short and unimportant ...
... Attic ear , was often endured in prose : often , how- ever , it was avoided by crasis , or elision , or the addition of a movable con- sonant . Crasis and elision occur especially when the first of the two words is short and unimportant ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent accusative adjectives adverbs anapaest antepenult aorist aorist system Attic prose catalectic close vowel compound connecting vowel consonant contracted crasis dative declension denote diphthong dual enclitic feminine forms future genitive Greek impf impr impv infin infinitive inflection irreg lengthened loosed masc masculine middle mute neut neuter nouns omitted orig oxytone participle passive penult perf perfect plup pluperfect plur plural poetic preposition pres present principal verb pronoun r. a. pr rare reduplication short vowel sing singular sometimes spondee subj subjunctive substantive syllable tenses things thou trag Verbals words ἂν δηλ εἰ εἴην ἐν καὶ μὴ οι ὅτι οὐ οὐκ τὰ τῇ τὴν τῆς τιμ τὸ τοῖς τὸν τοῦ τοῦτο τῷ τῶν φαίνω ὡς
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 15 - We still, however, see the visible marks on the page, and we know that the acute accent ( ' ) can stand only on one of the last three syllables of a word ; the circumflex ( " ) on one of the last two ; the grave (
Seite 13 - Hurl'd often cuts off the vowel at the end of a word, when the next word begins with a vowel; though he does not like the Greeks wholly drop the vowel, but lull retains it in writing like the Latins.
Seite 19 - NUMBEES: the singular in reference to one object, the plural to more than one, the dual to two only. five CASES : nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, and vocative. In the singular, the vocative is often like the nominative; in the plural, it is always so. In neuter words, the nominative and vocative are always like the accusative, and in the plural always end in a. The dual has but two forms, one for the nominative, accusative, and vocative, the other for the genitive and dative.