This picture is relevant. We promise. Have you ever stopped to consider how we use prepositions in language? […]
postclassical Greek
When we talk about the semantics of prepositional phrases, we are talking about a specific kind of conventionalized pattern. Conventional patterns are arbitrary in the sense that they are not predictable from one language to another. But in another way, they are nevertheless motivated (Sweetser 1990). There is a reason they occur as they do. Basic cognitive processes influence how different prepositions extend from spatial meanings to more abstract ones.
Previously, we published on YouTube the first part of our SBL 2023 presentation on Greek prepositional phrase constructions […]
We are excited and pleased to announce that our friend and colleague here at Koine-Greek.com, Chris Fresch, will […]
This post ended up being quite long. I’ve broken it into three smaller parts which are scheduled to […]
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 […]
James W. Voelz has a review of Robert Funk’s Greek Grammar on the Review of Biblical Literature, that’s […]