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greek grammar in greek william s annis scholiastae org february 5 2012 sometimes it would be nice to discuss grammar without having to drop back to our native language so ...

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                                       Greek Grammar in Greek
                                                  William S. Annis
                                                  Scholiastae.org∗
                                                  February 5, 2012
                  Sometimes it would be nice to discuss grammar without having to drop back to our native
              language, so I’ve made a collection of Greek grammatical vocabulary. My primary source is E.
              Dickey’s Ancient Greek Scholarship. Over more than a millennium of literary scholarship in the
              ancient world has resulted in a vast and somewhat redundant vocabulary for many corners of
              grammar. Since my goal is to make it possible to produce Greek rather than to provide a guide to
              ancient scholarship — for which Dickey’s book is the best guide — Ihave left out a lot of duplicate
              terminology. In general I tried to pick the word that appears to inspire the Latin, and thus the
              modern, grammatical vocabulary. Ialso occasionally checked to see what Modern Greek uses for
              a term.
              Parts of Speech
              The Greeks divided up the parts of speech a little differently, but for the most part we’ve inherited
              their division.
                  • μέρος λόγου “part of speech”
                  • ὄνομα, τό “noun”
                  • ἐπίθετον “adjective” (in ancient grammar considered a kind of noun)
                  • ῥῆμα, τό “verb”
                  • μετοχή, ἡ “participle” (which we now think of as part of the verb)
                  • ἄρθρον, τό “article” and also relative pronoun in the scholia
                  • ἀντωνυμία, ἡ “pronoun”
                       – ἀναφορική “relative”
                       – δεικτική “demonstrative”
                       – κτητική “possessive,” i.e., ἐμός, σός, κτλ.
                  • πρόθεσις, ἡ “preposition”
                 ∗This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. To view a copy of this license,
              visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/.
                                                          1
        • ἐπίρρημα, τό “adverb” but also covering some particles in the scholia
        • σύνδεσμος, ὁ “conjunction” but, again, also covering some particles in the scholia
        There was no classical word that matched the contemporary notion of a particle, which were
       described by their function as either σύνδεσμοι or ἐπιρρήματα. The Puristic word for a particle is
       τὸ μόριον, which seems as good a choice as any, with the warning that in ancient grammarians
       sometimes the word is used to describe a part of speech (a variant of μέρος.)
       Phonology
        • λέξις, ἡ “word” (in grammatical texts λόγος means many things, but it doesn’t usually mean
         “word”)
        • συλλαβή, ἡ “syllable”
        • στοιχεῖον, τό “sound/letter”
        • φωνῆεν (-ήεντος) “vowel”
        • σύμφωνον “consonant”
       Vowels may be:
        • μακρόν “long” (μηκύνω “lengthen;” μηκύνομαι “be (scanned, used as a) long”)
        • βραχύ “short” (βραχύνω “shorten;” βραχύνομαι “be (scanned, used as a) short”)
        • κοινόν (δίχρονον) “common,” that is, it can be either long or short
       Further a vowel may have:
        • πνεύματα “breathings”
        • δασέα “rough” (δασύνω “to aspirate; to write with a rough breathing or aspirated conso-
         nant”)
        • ψιλά “smooth” (ψιλόω “write/pronounce with a smooth breathing or unaspirated conso-
         nant”)
       There’s an extensive taxonomy for consonants. The most important words are:
        • ψιλόν “bare” or unaspirated stops (π, τ, κ)
        • δασύ “aspirated” (lit., “hairy”) stops (φ, θ, χ)
        • μέσον “voiced” (lit., “middle”) stops (β, δ, γ)
       The many marks of aspiration, accent and punctuation together are called αἱ προσῳδίαι:
        • τόνοι, οἱ “accents;” verb τονόω “to accent,” οὐκ ὀρθῶς τονοῦται, “(it is) not accented cor-
         rectly.”
                          2
        • syllables having an acute accent, ὀξεῖα (προσῳδία), are ὀξύτονος or, as a verb, ὀξύνειν; also
         describes words with an acute in the final syallable
        • paroxytone words (penult acute) are παροξύτονος, verb παροξύνειν
        • proparoxytone (antepenult acute) are προπαροξύτονος, verb προπαροξύνειν
        • words with a circumflex accent, περισπωμένη, are περισπομένος, verb περισπᾶν
        • penult circumflex are προπερισπώμενος, verb προπερισπᾶν
        • unaccented syllables are βαρύτονος, verb βαρύνειν
       Other useful words:
        • Contraction is ἡ συναίρεσις, verb συναιρέω. Vowel changes may occur κατὰ συναίρεσιν, as
         in, ἀπὸ “τῆς Σαπφόος” γίγνεται κατὰ συναίρεσιν “Σαπφοῦς.”
        • Crasis is ἡ κρᾶσις. Changes happen κατὰ κρᾶσιν, “by crasis,” as in κατὰ κρᾶσιν δέ, ὡς “τἀμά”
         ἀντὶ τοῦ “τὰ ἐμά.”
       Nouns and Adjectives
        • γένος, τό “gender”
          – ἄρρεν “masculine” (also ἀρρενικόν, with the usual Ionic/Koine variation in ἀρσεν- for
           both)
          – θηλύ “feminine” (also θηλυκόν)
          – οὐδέτερον “neuter”
        • ἀριθμός, ὁ “number”
          – ἑνικός “singular”
          – δυϊκός “dual”
          – πληθυντικός “plural”
        • πτῶσις, ἡ “case”
          – εὐθεῖα “nominative” (also, ὀρθή)
          – γενική “genitive”
          – δοτική “dative”
          – αἰτιατική “accusative”
          – κλητική “vocative”
          – ἀπενεκτική “ablative” (in case you want to discuss Latin grammar)
        • κλίνειν “to decline” a noun
          – κλίσις, ἡ “declension”
        • syntactic roles (from ἐνεργέω “to act”):
          – ὁ ἐνεργῶν “the subject”
          – ὁ ἐνεργούμενος “the object”
                          3
        For a noun “in” a case, use ἐπί + gen., παροξύνει καὶ ἐπὶ τῆς αἰτιατικῆς, “it is paroxytone also
       in the accusative.”
        The gender of a noun is described with the genitive or with κατὰ + acc., as in ἔστι δὲ τὸ
       “ἀμφόδου” ἐνταῦθα γένους οὐδετέρου· εὕρηται ὅμως καὶ κατὰ θηλυκὸν, “ἀμφόδου here is (of)
       neuter; it may also be feminine.” It may also be described with a simple predicate adjective, τὸ
       ὄνομοα γάρ ἐστι θηλυκόν.
        Adjectives may be:
        • συγκριτικόν “comparative”
        • ὑπερθετικόν “superlative”
       Verbs
       Verbs have —
        • ἔγκλισις, ἡ “mood”
          – ὁριστική “indicative”
          – προστακτική “imperative” (lit., “commanding”)
          – εὐκτική “optative”
          – ὑποτακτική “subjunctive”
          – ἀπαρέμφατος “infinitive”
        • διάθεσις, ἡ “voice”
          – ἐνέργεια, ἡ “active,” adj. ἐνεργητικός
          – πάθος, ὁ “passive,” adj. παθητικός
          – μεσότης, ἡ “middle,” adj. μέσος
        • πρόσωπον, τό “person”
          – πρῶτον “first”
          – δεύτερον “second”
          – τρίτον “third”
        • χρόνος, ὁ “tense”
          – ἐνεστώς “present”
          – παρεληλυθώς “past”
          – παρατατικός “imperfect”
          – παρακείμενος “perfect”
          – ὑπερσυντέλικος “pluperfect”
          – ἀόριστος “aorist” (lit., “indefinite,” also used to describe a class of pronouns)
          – μέλλων “future”
        • συζυγία, ἡ “conjugation”
        Verb conjugation is described by accenting except for the -μι verbs:
                          4
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...Greek grammar in william s annis scholiastae org february sometimes it would be nice to discuss without having drop back our native language so i ve made a collection of grammatical vocabulary my primary source is e dickey ancient scholarship over more than millennium literary the world has resulted vast and somewhat redundant for many corners since goal make possible produce rather provide guide which book best ihave left out lot duplicate terminology general tried pick word that appears inspire latin thus modern ialso occasionally checked see what uses term parts speech greeks divided up little differently but most part we inherited their division noun adjective considered kind verb participle now think as article also relative pronoun scholia demonstrative possessive preposition this work licensed under creative commons attribution sharealike license view copy visit http creativecommons licenses by sa adverb covering some particles conjunction again there was no classical matched co...

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