Rules for ascertaining the sense conveyed in ancient Greek manuscripts, by Herman Heinfetter1848 |
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ACCUSATIVES BEFORE INFINITIVE admit Adverbs ANCIENT GREEK appears Article is expressed Article is never Article preceding Attri Bishop Middleton Context Datives Declinable Words Definite Article Definite Sense expressed in Translation expressed or understood Expression and Omission FENCHURCH STREET form of expression Greek Article Greek Language holds Imperative Mood imply indicated Infinitive Mood Insertion and Omission Insertion or Omission IRREGULAR GOVERNMENT Irregular Sentences Literal Sense Lord Major Stop man-The ment Minor Stop never expressed Note obey the truth obey unrighteou omitted Parenthetical Sentence Participle particular passage is required Perfect Expression Person or Thing Personal Pronoun Nominative placed prefixed Preposition is preceded Proper Name REGULAR ARRANGEMENT RELATING TO SENSE Relative required to convey RULES OF REGULAR RULES RELATING second Attributive Sense afforded Sense conveyed Sense intended Sense the passage Sentence of Government shews unless VOCATIVES words governed words that precede words that succeed words they govern
Populárne pasáže
Strana 44 - When two or more attributes, joined by a copulative or copulatives, are assumed of the same person or thing, before the first attributive the article is inserted, before the remaining ones it is omitted...
Strana 47 - ... looking for the blessed hope and appearing of the glory of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ...
Strana 43 - Predicate, as already explained. § 7. Correlatives are words in regimen ', having a mutual reference ; and consequently so circumstanced, that if the first relate to the second, the second must relate to the first. The Greek writers, it is observable, mark the relation in the second wherever it is necessary to mark it in the first2: in other words, where the first has the Article, the second has it likewise.
Strana 44 - It has been shown, that in all cases the participle of existence, uv, ourfa, ov, is understood between the article and its predicate ; whence it will follow, that the existence of the person or thing, to which the article is prefixed, is always supposed. 1. In propositions which merely affirm or deny existence, the name of the person or thing of which existence is affirmed or denied is without the article.
Strana 6 - His life before his death was a mortal life, a temporal life ; but his life after his resurrection was an eternal life: Rom. vi. 9. "Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead, dieth no more ; death hath no more dominion over him.
Strana 47 - I ascend unto the Father of me, and Father of you, and God of me, and God of you ; also 2 Cor.
Strana 46 - Rev. xxii. 17. And the Spirit and the Bride say come.
Strana 8 - The Verb may be succeeded by a Copulative Conjunction, and the Conjunction by another Verb in the same...
Strana 7 - Pronoun is the or a Nominative to the Verb, whether such Pronoun is expressed or understood, Note 9.
Strana 6 - Class 2. A Nominative or Nominatives and the words it or they govern, Note 8, if, 7.