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AGE 2013 02 01 Introduction to the Greek Verb

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Ancient Greek for Everyone:
A New Digital Resource for
Beginning Greek
Unit 2 part 1:
Introduction to the Greek Verb
2013 edition
Wilfred E. Major
wmajor@lsu.edu
Ancient Greek for Everyone
This class
AGE Unit 2: Introduction to the Greek Verb
• You have learned the Greek alphabet and other
components of the Greek writing system.
• Now you begin learning Greek words: what they
mean, how to form them, and how to understand
them.
• We begin with the most powerful category of Greek
words, the part of speech called the VERB.
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• A VERB describes an action.
• An English verb by itself designates only the action
that is taking place: run, stop, be, …
• A Greek verb, however, normally communicates
more information than just what the action is.
• In fact, a Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
–
–
–
–
–
Person
Number
Tense
Mood
Voice
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
– Person: The subject of the verb, that is, who is the
focus of the action
– 1st person = the speaker (I, we)
– 2nd person = person spoken to (you, y’all)
– 3rd person = anyone/anything else (he/she/it, they, or
anyone/anything else you can name)
– English uses separate words to indicate the person
(subject).
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• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
– Person
– Number: whether the Person (subject)
is singular or plural
– singular = I, you, he/she/it, or any single subject
– plural = we, y’all, they, or any plural subject
– Tense
– Mood
– Voice
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
– Person
– Number: whether the person (subject)
is singular or plural
– English uses separate words to indicate the number
of the person (subject) and marks a verb with a
3rd person singular subject: runs, stops, is…
– Tense
– Mood
– Voice
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
– Person
– Number
– Tense: When the action happens
(past, present, future)
– Mood
– Voice
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• Tense: When the action happens (past, present, future)
• English uses a combination of verb changes or additions
and additional words to indicate the tense:
– run, ran, have run, will run, do run, is running…
– stop, stopped, have stopped, will stop, do stop, is stopping…
– is, was, have been, is being…
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• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
–
–
–
–
Person
Number
Tense
Mood: This refers to the “mode” of the verb (most
often indicating whether an action is real or
hypothetical in some way).
– Voice
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• Mood: This refers to the “mode” of the verb (most
often indicating whether an action is real or
hypothetical in some way).
• English uses additional words to indicate the mood:
– to run, could run, might run, should run, would run…
– to stop, could stop, might stop, should stop, would stop…
– to be, could be, might be, should be, would be…
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
– Person
– Number
– Tense
– Mood: This refers to the “mode” of the verb (most
often indicating whether an action is real or
hypothetical in some way).
– Indicative means the action is real.
– Infinitive means the action without any time or subject.
– Voice
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates FIVE
pieces of information:
–
–
–
–
–
Person
Number
Tense
Mood
Voice: This indicates the role the subject plays in the action.
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates FIVE
pieces of information:
– Voice: This indicates the role the subject plays in the action.
– Greek can distinguish three roles (voices):
– Active: The subject causes the action
• We run the program.
• We stop the program.
• I buy a drink.
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• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates FIVE
pieces of information:
– Voice: This indicates the role the subject plays in the action.
– Greek can distinguish three roles (voices):
– Middle: The subject is part or all of the action
• We run.
• We stop.
• I buy (myself) a drink.
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• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates FIVE
pieces of information:
– Voice: This indicates the role the subject plays in the action.
– Greek can distinguish three roles (voices):
– Passive: The subject receives the consequence of the action
• We are run by a computer.
• We are stopped by a police officer.
• The drinks are bought by me.
– Note: In Classical Greek, the passive voice is rare,
but it becomes more common in Koine Greek.
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• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
– Person
– Number
– Tense
– Mood
– Voice
PARSING: To “parse” a Greek verb means to identify the
above five qualities about a specific verb form.
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• PARSING: To “parse” a Greek verb means to identify the
five qualities about a specific verb form.
• For example, a specific verb form could be
– Third person
– Singular
– Present
– Indicative
– Active
• Once you know these five items and the verb’s meaning,
you have identified the verb completely and understand
what it means.
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AGE Unit 2: Introduction to the Greek Verb
• Now you have learned the what information a Greek
verb conveys about an action.
• Next we learn how a Greek verb conveys this
information.
• You have seen how English verbs change, make
additions or use additional words to convey
information.
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• I am running.
• You are running.
• She is running.
• We are running.
• Y’all are running.
• They are running.
Building a Greek Verb
Consider the verbs in the above sentences
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• runningi
• runningyou
• runningshe
• runningwe
• runningy’all
• runningthey
Building a Greek Verb
Now IMAGINE verbs like this!
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• I do stop.
• You do stop.
• He does stop.
• We do stop.
• Y’all do stop.
• They do stop.
Building a Greek Verb
Consider the verbs in the above sentences
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• stopdoi
• stopdoyou
• stopdohe
• stopdowe
• stopdoy’all
• stopdothey
Building a Greek Verb
Now IMAGINE verbs like this!
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Building a Greek verb
• Those imaginary verbs work basically the way verbs work in
Greek.
• Greek verbs for the most part communicate person, number,
tense, mood and voice by adding parts to the verb, rather than
by using additional words.
• Building verbs this way can seem strange at first, but to a
Greek, piling on words they way English does seems strange.
Neither is better or more difficult, but they are different.
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Building a Greek verb
• To begin building a Greek verb, start with the “stem.”
• The stem tells you what action the verb describes:
δεικ = “show”
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Building a Greek verb
• All the verbs in this unit are in the present tense.
• So the stem needs a marker that says the verb is in the
present tense.
• Adding a -ν- to the stem typically marks a verb as in the
present tense. It will be easier to pronounce this verb by
adding –νυ–.
• So now the stem looks (and sounds) like this:
– δεικνυ = “show” (in the present)
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Building a Greek verb
• So now the verb is in the present tense.
• The most common mood of Greek verbs is the
indicative (which means the action is real). This is
also effectively the default mood for verbs.
• All the verbs in this unit are in the active voice, so
the following verb forms are
– Present tense
– Indicative mood
– Active voice
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Building a Greek verb
• To indicate person and number, the verb needs distinct
endings, which are as follows:
• -μι = I (1st person singular)
-μεν = we (1st person plural)
• -ς = you (2nd person singular)
-τε = y’all (2nd person plural)
• -σι = (s)he, it (3rd person sing) -ασι = they (3rd person plural)
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• δείκνυμι
– I show, am showing, do
show.
• δείκνυς
• δείκνυμεν
– We show, are showing,
do show.
• δείκνυτε
– You show, are showing,
do show.
• δείκνυσι
– Y’all show, are showing,
do show.
• δεικνύασι
– (S)he/it shows, is
showing, does show.
– They show, are showing,
do show.
Building a Greek Verb
The Present Indicative Active of δείκνυμι
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• From Unit 1: Placing the accent:
– On most Greek words, the “recessive” rule determines the
placement of the accent. This means:
– If the last syllable of the word contains a single short
vowel, the accent “recedes” two syllables:
– δίδοτε
– It can recede only to the last short vowel sound of this
syllable (never to the first part), so the accent appears as an
acute (“/”):
– ἄνθρωπος, δώσετε (= δοόσετε)
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• From Unit 1: Placing the accent:
– On most Greek words, the “recessive” rule determines the
placement of the accent. This means:
– If the word has only two syllables and the last syllable of
the word contains a single short vowel, the accent
“recedes” to the first syllable:
– δότε
– or the first part of a long vowel sound:
– δῶρον (= δόορον)
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• From Unit 1: Placing the accent:
– On most Greek words, the “recessive” rule determines the
placement of the accent. This means:
– If the last syllable of the word contains a long vowel sound,
the accent “recedes” only one syllable:
– διδότω.
– It can recede only to the second part of this syllable, so the
accent always appears as an acute (“/”):
– παραδώσω (= παραδοόσω = παραδοόσοο)
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Spell it Like It Sounds!
• Remember: A word ending in -σι can add a final -ν
(“nu-movable”) to make pronunciation easier:
– For example, εἴκοσι εἶσι  εἴκοσιν εἶσιν.
– This added -ν has no meaning; it simply helps
pronunciation.
– For the verb δείκνυμι, this means δείκνυσι and
δεικνύασι can appear as δείκνυσιν and
δεικνύασιν. It does not affect their parsing,
meaning or translation.
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• The second most common mood of Greek verbs is the
infinitive (which refers to the action without person, number
or tense, so it needs only a single ending).
• The ending –ναι signals the verb is in the infinitive.
• δεικνύναι
– “show” in the infinitive mood (mode)
• This form is the present, infinitive, active.
• Note the placement of the accent.
• We will learn the meanings and translations of the infinitive
mood while reading passages.
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• A Greek verb by itself usually communicates
FIVE pieces of information:
– Person
– Number
– Tense
– Mood
– Voice
PARSING: To “parse” a Greek verb means to identify the
above five qualities about a specific verb form.
Ancient Greek for Everyone
• PARSING: To “parse” a Greek verb means to identify the
above five qualities about a specific verb form.
• For example, δείκνυμι is
– First person
– Singular
– Present
– Indicative
– Active
• All of the above information, plus its stem meaning, tells
you that this form means “I show,” or “I am showing” or
“I do show.”
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• When translating a Greek verb into English,
– Do not worry about using two, three or more words in
English to translate just one in Greek. The two
languages build their words differently.
– Try to see the action that the Greek verb describes.
Then use the English that describes that same action.
– Sometimes you have multiple ways to translate a verb.
Choose the way that works best in English.
– For example, δείκνυμι (first person, singular, present,
indicative, active) legitimately translates as “I show,”
or “I am showing” or “I do show.” Choose the one that
works best in English.
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• VOCABULARY: Although a Greek verb can morph into
many different forms, it is listed in a dictionary (Greek
“lexicon”) under just one form:
– First person
– Singular
– Present
– Indicative
– Active
• For example: δείκνυμι show
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Examples of Vocabulary entries
• ἀπόλλυμι kill, destroy
• δείκνυμι show
• μίγνυμι mix
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• μίγνυμι
• μίγνυμεν
– I mix, am mixing, do
mix.
• μίγνυς
– We mix, are mixing, do
mix.
• μίγνυτε
– You mix, are mixing, do
mix.
• μίγνυσι
– Y’all mix, are mixing, do
mix.
• μιγνύασι
– (S)he/it mixes, is mixing,
does mix.
– They mix, are mixing, do
mix.
Building a Greek Verb
The Present Infinitive Active is μιγνύναι
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Building a Greek verb
• The stem of ἀπόλλυμι is:
– ολ = “kill, destroy”
– ολνυ  ολλυ = “kill, die” (in the present)
• The combination –λν– always changes to –λλ– in Greek.
• In practice, Greek always adds a prefix to this word, ἀπ(ό),
meaning “away,” similar to the way English can say “kill off.”
Thus the stem actually looks (and sounds) like this:
– ἀπολλυ = “kill, destroy” (in the present)
– This verb is rare except in this compounded form.
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• ἀπόλλυμι
– I kill, am killing, do kill.
• ἀπόλλυς
– You kill, are killing, do
kill.
• ἀπόλλυσι
– (S)he/it kills, is killing,
does kill.
• ἀπόλλυμεν
– We kill, are killing, do
kill.
• ἀπόλλυτε
– Y’all kill, are killing, do
kill.
• ἀπολλύασι
– They kill, are killing, do
kill.
Building a Greek Verb
The Present Infinitive Active is ἀπολλύναι
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• Next
– practice with ἀπόλλυμι, δείκνυμι, μίγνυμι
• The practice sheet provides all the forms of these three
verbs. We will draw forms at random from a hat, and
you need to (1) say the word out loud (2) parse the form
and (3) translate it into English.
– start AGE Unit 2 part 2: Six Common Greek verbs.
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