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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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