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Table of Contents:
Part I: Letters, Sounds, Syllables, Accent
Part II: Inflection
Part IV: Syntax
ADVERBIAL COMPLEX SENTENCES
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2193
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2487
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ADJECTIVE CLAUSES
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RELATIVE CLAUSES:
2488-
2573
)
[*] 180. A proclitic sometimes takes an accent, thus: a. οὐ at the end of a sentence: φῄς, ἢ οὔ; do you say so or not? πῶς γὰρ οὔ; for why not? Also οὔ no standing alone. b. ἐξ, ἐν, and εἰς receive an acute in poetry when they follow the word to which they belong and stand at the end of the verse: ““κακῶν ἔξ” out of evils” Ξ 472. c. ὡς as becomes ὥς in poetry when it follows its noun: θεὸς ὥς as a god. ὡς standing for οὕτως is written ὥς even in prose (οὐδ᾽ ὥς not even thus). d. When the proclitic precedes an enclitic (183 e): ἔν τισι. N.—ὁ used as a relative (for ὅς, 1105) is written ὅ. On ὅ demonstrative see 1114.
American Book Company, 1920.
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