To use a definite article is to say to your audience: “I know what I’m talking about and […]
Category Archive: Linguistics
“Cognitive models are directly embodied with respect to their content, or else they are systematically linked to directly […]
The papers from the Greek Verb Conference in Cambridge last year aren’t only going to be digital through […]
Out of the kindness of a friend, T. Muraoka’s A Syntax of Septuagint Greek (Amazon) arrived at my proverbial […]
Did you know that there are different types of negation? Sometimes negators (“not” words in English) only affect […]
Our friends and colleagues at Old School Script have released a new edition of their interview series: Scholars in […]
If you’ve ever encountered some weird looking forms perhaps tagged as perfects perhaps tagged as something else that […]
One claim that you’ll regularly encounter once you start reading various contemporary works on the Greek Verb from […]
“X-rays may not be used to fit shoes.” RCW 70.98.170Prohibition — Fluoroscopic x-ray shoefitting devices. The operation or […]
Jan Rijkoff, linguist/typologist, wrote a superb monograph presenting language variation and typology of the syntax and semantics of […]