Grammar of Greek 1, Lesson 2

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What are the nominative singular forms of the Greek article? ὁ (masculine), ἡ (feminine), τό (neuter)  
What are the genitive singular forms of the Greek article? τοῦ, (masculine), τῆς (feminine), τοῦ (neuter)  
What are the dative singular forms of the Greek article? τῷ (masculine), τῇ (feminine), τῷ (neuter)  
What are the accusative singular forms of the Greek article? τόν (masculine), τήν (feminine), τό (neuter)  
What are the nominative plural forms of the Greek article? οἱ (masculine), αἱ (feminine), τά (neuter)  
What are the genitive plural forms of the Greek article? τῶν (masculine), τῶν (feminine), τῶν (neuter)  
What are the dative plural forms of the Greek article? τοῖς (masculine), ταῖς (feminine), τοῖς (neuter)  
What are the accusative plural forms of the Greek article? τούς (masculine), τάς (feminine), τά (neuter)  
Translate ο δε But he...  
What are the nominative singular forms of the Greek relative pronoun? ὅς (masculine), ἥ (feminine), ὅ (neuter)  
What are the genitive singular forms of the Greek relative pronoun? οὗ, (masculine), ἧς (feminine), οὗ (neuter)  
What are the dative singular forms of the Greek relative pronoun? ᾧ (masculine), ᾗ (feminine), ᾧ (neuter)  
What are the accusative singular forms of the Greek relative pronoun? ὅν (masculine), ἥν (feminine), ὅ (neuter)  
What are the nominative plural forms of the Greek relative pronoun? οἵ (masculine), αἵ (feminine), ἅ (neuter)  
What are the genitive plural forms of the Greek relative pronoun? ὧν (masculine), ὧν (feminine), ὧν (neuter) (revised)
What are the dative plural forms of the Greek relative pronoun? οἷς (masculine), αἷς (feminine), οἷς (neuter) (revised)
What are the accusative plural forms of the Greek relative pronoun? οὕς (masculine), ἅς (feminine), ἅ (neuter) (revised)
Parse ὁ nominative singular masculine, from ὁ, meaning "the"  
Parse ἡ nominative singular feminine, from ἡ, meaning "the"  
Parse τό nominative or accusative singular neuter, from τό, meaning "the"  
Parse τοῦ genitive singular masculine or neuter, from ὁ or τό, meaning "of the"  
Parse τῆς genitive singular feminine, from ἡ, meaning "of the"  
Parse τῷ dative singular masculine or neuter, from ὁ or τό, meaning "to/for/with/by the"  
Parse τῇ dative singular feminine, from ἡ, meaning "to/for/with/by the"  
Parse τόν accusative singular masculine, from ὁ, meaning "the"  
Parse τήν accusative singular feminine, from ἡ, meaning "the"  
Parse οἱ nominative plural masculine, from ὁ, meaning "the"  
Parse αἱ nominative plural feminine, from ἡ, meaning "the"  
Parse τά nominative or accusative plural neuter, from τό, meaning "the"  
Parse τῶν genitive plural masculine, feminine, or neuter, from ὁ, ἡ, or τό, meaning "of the"  
Parse τοῖς dative plural masculine or neuter, from ὁ or τό, meaning "to/for/with/by the"  
Parse ταῖς dative plural feminine, from ἡ, meaning "to/for/with/by the"  
Parse τούς accusative plural masculine, from ὁ, meaning "the"  
Parse τάς accusative plural feminine, from ἡ, meaning "the"  
Parse ὅς nominative singular masculine, from ὅς, meaning "who/which/that"  
Parse ἥ nominative singular feminine, from ἥ, meaning "who/which/that"  
Parse ὅ nominative or accusative singular neuter, from ὅ, meaning "who/which/that"  
Parse οὗ genitive singular masculine or neuter, from ὅς or ὅ, meaning "of whom/which"  
Parse ἧς genitive singular feminine, from ἥ, meaning "of whom/which"  
Parse ᾧ dative singular masculine or neuter, from ὅς or ὅ, meaning "to whom/which"  
Parse ᾗ dative singular feminine, from ἥ, meaning "to whom/which"  
Parse ὅν accusative singular masculine, from ὅς, meaning "whom/which/that"  
Parse ἥν accusative singular feminine, from ἥ, meaning "whom/which/that"  
Parse οἵ nominative plural masculine, from ὅς, meaning "who/which/that"  
Parse αἵ nominative plural feminine, from ἥ, meaning "who/which/that"  
Parse ἅ nominative or accusative plural neuter, from ὅ, meaning "who/which/that"  
Parse ὧν genitive plural masculine, feminine, or neuter, from ὅς, ἥ, or ὅ, meaning "of whom/which"  
Parse οἷς dative plural masculine or neuter, from ὅς or ὅ, meaning "to whom/which"  
Parse αἷς dative plural feminine, from ἥ, meaning "to whom/which"  
Parse οὕς accusative plural masculine, from ὅς, meaning "who/which/that"  
Parse ἅς accusative plural feminine, from ἥ, meaning "who/which/that"  
In which case will the subject of each Greek sentence be? Nominative  
A neuter plural nominative often takes a _____ verb. Singular  
What four questions do adverbs answer? How, when, where, and why  
What three questions do adjectives answer? Which one, what kind, and how many  
Adjectives, possessive pronouns, participles, and the article always agree with whatever they are modifying in _______, ________, and ________. gender, number, and case  
________, ________, ________, and ________ always agree with whatever they are modifying in gender, number, and case. adjectives, possessive pronouns, participles, and the article  
What is an augment? An augment is a change applied to a verb to indicate that the verb is in the past tense. (-ed in English)  
What is an elision? Elision is the omission of one or more sounds (such as a vowel, a consonant, or a whole syllable) in a word with the result that the word is easier to pronounce. In Greek, an elision is marked by an apostrophe.  
Every prepositional phrase is either _________ or __________. Adverbial or adjectival  
What is a DMW? A DMW (dependent marker word) is a word that indicates to the grammarian that a given clause is dependent.  
What are the two forms of DMW's? Subordinating conjunctions and relative pronouns  
What is a subordinate conjunction? A conjunction which introduces a dependent clause.  
What is the lexical form of a Greek noun? The lexical form of a Greek noun is its form in the nominative singular.  
What is the lexical form of a Greek verb? The lexical form of verbs is the first person singular, present indicative.  
What is the difference between the stem and root of a verb? The root of a verb is its most basic form. The stem of a verb is the basic form of that verb in a particular tense. Different tense stems are formed from the verbal root.  
What is the difference between the lexical form and stem of a noun or verb? The lexical form is the form of a noun or verb as it is found in a lexicon. A stem The stem of a verb or noun is the part of the verb or noun which carries its basic meaning.  
What is a verb's voice? Voice refers to the relationship between the subject and the verb, identifying whether the subject does or receives the action of the verb.  
What is active voice? Active voice means the subject is doing the action in the verb.  
What is passive voice? Passive voice means the subject receives the action of the verb.  
What is a verb's mood? Mood refers to the relationship between the verb and reality.  
What does a verb in the indicative mood describe? A verb in the indicative mood describes something that is, as opposed to something that may or might be. It is the mood of reality.  
What does a verb in the subjunctive mood describe? A verb in the subjunctive mood describes what may or might be, as opposed to what is. It is the mood of possibility.  
What does a verb in the imperative mood describe? A verb in the imperative mood when it is making a command.  
What are the three Greek accents? The acute, ά; the circumflex, ᾶ; and the grave, ὰ.  
What is the tense of a Greek verb? A category which describes the verb's aspect and time.  
What are the Greek verb tenses? Present, imperfect, future, aorist, and perfect.  
What is the present perfect tense in English? In English, the present perfect tense is any verb that uses the helping verbs "have" or "has," referring to past action which itself or the effects thereof continue into the present.  
What is the past perfect tense in English? In English, the past perfect tense is any verb that uses the helping verb "had," referring to action in the past before another action in the past.  

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