Scholars in Press: An Interview with Jimmy Parks
Syntax
I recently ran a syntax query for places where conjunctions begin the apodosis of a conditional construction. For […]
Porter, Stanley. 2015. Linguistic analysis of the Greek New Testament. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic. This review is […]
Already by the first century CE, ἐκ & ἀπό have experience over a thousand years of history and […]
Both contributors to this blog (yes, there actually is more than one — Mike and Rachel Aubrey) are […]
T. Muraoka. 2016. A syntax of Septuagint Greek. Leuven: Peeters. There is a sense in which introductions are […]
Did you know that there are different types of negation? Sometimes negators (“not” words in English) only affect […]
Noam Chomsky’s (1965) Aspect of the theory of syntax presents a revised version of generative grammar that constrains the […]
James W. Voelz has a review of Robert Funk’s Greek Grammar on the Review of Biblical Literature, that’s […]
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.