I generally appreciate Daniel Wallace’s Grammar. Granted, I think he uses way too many categories that have very […]
Category Archive: Greek
Using a couple of basic methods borrowed from linguistics, I helped a friend whose just working through first […]
I’ve been gone for the past month or so, not such much because of work, but because of […]
As I’ve moved from analyzing pronouns to reading the secondary literature about them, I am utterly shocked by […]
Specifically, here, we are talking about instances where the pronominal clitic attaches to the verb in spite of […]
Previously, I set forth three sets of data that make up the difficult examples of pronominal clitics. In […]
I really don’t know. I’ve been focused on working on highly technical posts, nothing else has happened on […]
In our previous post, we looked at a variety of examples of pronominal clitics in noun phrases and […]
The primary pronominal clitic form we find within NP’s is the genitive singular =μου. The equal sign, “=,” […]
A few days ago I posted a few texts where we had the very same clause used six […]