This post ended up being quite long. I’ve broken it into three smaller parts which are scheduled to […]
Category Archive: Historical Linguistics
Somehow this post ended up being 2000 words long. I’ve broken it into three smaller parts which are […]
Somehow this post ended up being 2000 words long. I’ve broken it into three smaller parts which are […]
Transitivity plays a central role in all voice usage, not only in the contrast between active and middle, but also within the usage of the middle voice itself. Understanding that range is important for discerning the meaning of a given verb in the middle voice when reading the biblical text or other contemporary Koine Greek literature.
Here’s a recently completed Ph.D. Dissertation posted on Academia.edu. Thought you might be interested:
Ancient Greek Verb-Initial Compounds: Their Diachronic Development Within the Greek Compound System by Olga Tribulato I don’t know […]
The purpose of this second post (for the first post, see here: Challenges in language analysis: thesis prefatory […]
Was anyone else aware of the fact that Peeters has this three volume set? A Companion to Linear […]
I know that this volume is not strictly about Greek. Nevertheless, it’s a worthwhile volume to examine. And […]
I came across an interesting quote from David Lightfoot in Natural Logic and the Greek Moods: Greek […]