Hide browse bar Your current position in the text is marked in blue. Click anywhere in the line to jump to another position:
part:
chapter:
section:
1. PRESENT SYSTEM
II. FUTURE SYSTEM
III. FIRST (SIGMATIC>) AORIST SYSTEM
IV. SECOND AORIST SYSTEM
V. FIRST (K) PERFECT SYSTEM
VI. SECOND PERFECT SYSTEM
VII. PERFECT MIDDLE SYSTEM
VIII. FIRST PASSIVE SYSTEM (
ΘΗ
PASSIVE)
IX. SECOND PASSIVE SYSTEM (H PASSIVE)
PERIPHRASTIC FORMS
FIRST CONJUGATION OR VERBS IN
Ω
INFLECTION OF
Ω-
VERBS
SECOND CONJUGATION OR VERBS IN MI
PRESENT SYSTEM
IRREGULAR MI-VERBS
This text is part of:
Table of Contents:
Part I: Letters, Sounds, Syllables, Accent
Part II: Inflection
Part IV: Syntax
ADVERBIAL COMPLEX SENTENCES
(
2193
-
2487
)
ADJECTIVE CLAUSES
(
RELATIVE CLAUSES:
2488-
2573
)
[*] 581. The future perfect usually has a passive force. The active meaning is found where the perfect middle or active has an active meaning (1946, 1947). κεκτήσομαι shall possess (κέκτημαι possess), κεκρά_ξομαι shall cry out (κέκρα_γα cry out), κεκλάγξομαι shall scream (κέκλαγγα scream), μεμνήσομαι shall remember (μέμνημαι remember), πεπαύσομαι shall have ceased (πέπαυμαι have ceased).
American Book Company, 1920.
The National Endowment for the Humanities provided support for entering this text.
Purchase a copy of this text (not necessarily the same edition) from Amazon.com