Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb

Front Cover
Ginn, 1889 - Greek language - 464 pages
 

Contents

Meaning of the Future Perfect
21
PERFECT
29
Use of Perfect in the Dependent Moods 31
31
FUTURE
35
CHAPTER VII
37
course
37
SECTION
77
POTENTIAL INDICATIVE
81
Same construction in dependent sentences
103
A PURE FINAL CLAUSES
108
Subjunctive and Optative with el ke ei etc after olda
131
Future Perfect Infinitive
137
124 125
151
Future Participle
153
b FUTURE CONDITIONS
163
Optative in Protasis and Apodosis
167
MIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
169
PECULIAR FORMS OF CONDITIONAL SENTENCES
173
227229
179
General statement of Principle
179
Δέ ἀλλά AND αὐτάρ IN APODOSIS
195
A RELATIVE WITH DEFINITE ANTECEDENT
195
Av or ké with Conditional Relatives and Subjunctive
199
Clauses
201
INFINITIVE WITH
202
INDICATIVE WITH ἄν
203
Perfect Infinitive with
206
Assimilation in Conditional Relative Clauses
213
Aé in the Antecedent Clause
215
Participle with av never forms a Protasis
217
214 215
217
Ὥστε WITH INFINITIVE
227
CHAPTER IV
227
Participle by Assimilation after wore
231
238
239
Els Ŏ ke in Homer és 8 and és où in Herodotus
243
SECTION PAGE
245
Пpiv with Optative only after Negatives
249
IIpiv without av followed by Subjunctive
251
126 127
251
Toτepov with Infinitive once in Thucydides
253
SECTION VIII
253
Relation of Indirect Discourse to other substantive
255
128 129
261
Πρίν WITH INFINITIVE
269
INDIRECT QUOTATION OF COMPLEX SENTENCES
271
SINGLE DEPENDENT CLAUSES IN INDIRECT DISCOURSE
277
SECTION PAGE
283
SECTION I
285
Indicative in Causal Sentences 286
287
FUTURE WISHES
289
Optative in Commands and Exhortations
291
SECTION PAGE
295
GENERAL CONDITIONAL RELATIVE SENTENCES
295
CHAPTER V
297
Infinitive expressing Limitation parenthetical
310
Ὡς δοκεῖν ὡς εἰκάσαι ὡς ἰδεῖν ἀκοῦσαι etc
311
Absolute είναι as in ἑκὼν εἶναι
312
Absolute Infinitive as Accusative of Limitation
313
Infinitive with at yáp in Wishes twice in Odyssey
314
Articular Infinitive as Subject or Object
315
Article makes the Infinitive more distinctly a Noun
316
Infinitive with roû as Object
317
795797 Infinitive as Accusative after Adjectives and Nouns
318
92 93
319
Constructions of Infinitive as Genitive with Toû
319
800803 Infinitive with roû TQ and 76 with Prepositions 320
320
Articular Infinitive as Appositive
321
Infinitive with τὸ μὴ οὐ or τὸ μή in negative sense 325
325
66 67
325
67 68
327
CHAPTER VI
329
Participles generally plural used substantively without
331
B CIRCUMSTANTIAL PARTICIPLE
333
Genitive Absolute
337
Agent expressed by Dative in Personal Construction
345
881 882
349
884886
353
Impersonal Construction with
355
Omission of v
359
Infinitive with Verbs of S 879901
363
Mý with Present and Past Tenses of Indicative
369
Causal öri
377
Agent expressed by Dative or Accusative in Impersonal
379
137
388
Statistics of the use of the Final Particles
397
Xenophons peculiar use of is is av and ows av in Final
399
On some disputed points in the Construction of de etc with
403
Apodosis not always denied here
412
9496
55 56
68 69
Relations of Tenses in unreal Conditions
2
65
3
363
4
149 150
5
77
6
364
8
GREEK INDEX 441
15
207209
15
357 358
1
ENGLISH INDEX 452
2
365 366
3
Extent of term Indirect Discourse 256
4
true
911
4
Participles belonging to main construction combined
5
SUPPLEMENTARY PARTICIPLE
3
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Popular passages

Page 29 - give a more vivid statement of general truths, by employing a distinct case or several distinct cases in the past to represent (as it were) all possible cases, and implying that what has occurred is likely to occur again under similar circumstances.
Page 88 - When the apodosis has a verb of past time expressing a customary or repeated action, the protasis may refer (in a general way) to any act or acts of a given class which may be supposed to
Page 160 - after a secondary tense, it may be either changed to the same tense of the optative or retained in the
Page 230 - or by an adverb. 2. On the other hand, when the chief force falls on the necessity, propriety, or possibility of the act, and not on the act itself, the
Page 9 - the Greeks, like other workmen, did not care to use their finest tools on every occasion; and it is often necessary to remember this
Page 29 - commonly distinguished from the present by referring to a single or a sudden occurrence, while the present (as usual) implies
Page 164 - originally conceived, would have been expressed by some tense of the indicative (with or without
Page 26 - or future relatively to the time of the verb with which they are connected. The
Page 114 - nothing has been further from my thoughts than a complete theoretical discussion of all the principles which govern the use of the moods. He who ventures far upon that sea is in great danger of being lost in the fog or stranded; for, while Comparative Philology has thrown much and
Page 154 - direct discourse may be either changed to the same tense of the optative or

Bibliographic information