The Eton Greek grammar, with bp. Wordsworth's syntax, tr. by W. Routledge1854 |
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Page 1
... beginning , r in middle or end . t always , not , as in English , sibi- lant before i . Hu in beginning , ( except among the Æolians , who sometimes omit the rough breathing ) ; u in middle or end ; y in Latin and English . kh or ch ...
... beginning , r in middle or end . t always , not , as in English , sibi- lant before i . Hu in beginning , ( except among the Æolians , who sometimes omit the rough breathing ) ; u in middle or end ; y in Latin and English . kh or ch ...
Page 2
... beginning with a vowel follow immediately in the same sentence , becomes ou . 2. Letters are divided into Vowels and Consonants . 3. There are seven vowels , pwvńɛvta , a , e , n , 1 , 0 , V , W. The other seventeen are consonants ...
... beginning with a vowel follow immediately in the same sentence , becomes ou . 2. Letters are divided into Vowels and Consonants . 3. There are seven vowels , pwvńɛvta , a , e , n , 1 , 0 , V , W. The other seventeen are consonants ...
Page 3
... beginning ; Improper , a long one . เ Obs . 2. In the diphthongs q , y , w , the ancients , who used the larger or capital letters , wrote AI , HI , and 21. In smaller or Byzantine letters I was underwritten , which letter indeed can ...
... beginning ; Improper , a long one . เ Obs . 2. In the diphthongs q , y , w , the ancients , who used the larger or capital letters , wrote AI , HI , and 21. In smaller or Byzantine letters I was underwritten , which letter indeed can ...
Page 5
... beginning with a vowel or diphthong takes the smooth or rough breathing in the beginning ; which breathing , however , in the case of a diphthong , is placed over the latter vowel ; as opos , a mountain ; avròs , himself ; öpos , a ...
... beginning with a vowel or diphthong takes the smooth or rough breathing in the beginning ; which breathing , however , in the case of a diphthong , is placed over the latter vowel ; as opos , a mountain ; avròs , himself ; öpos , a ...
Page 6
... beginning either F or the rough breathing , when compounded with a privative did not admit the epen- thetic ν ' as ἀεικὴς from Fείκω , ἅαπτος from ἅπτω . STOPS . 17. The system of stops is the same as in modern books , except that our ...
... beginning either F or the rough breathing , when compounded with a privative did not admit the epen- thetic ν ' as ἀεικὴς from Fείκω , ἅαπτος from ἅπτω . STOPS . 17. The system of stops is the same as in modern books , except that our ...
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The Eton Greek Grammar, with BP. Wordsworth's Syntax, Tr. by W. Routledge Charles Wordsworth,Eton Coll No preview available - 2016 |
Popular passages
Page 32 - ... hundredth two hundredth three hundredth four hundredth five hundredth six hundredth seven hundredth eight hundredth nine hundredth one thousandth SPECIAL RULES FOR PRONOUNCING CLASSES OF WORDS.
Page 67 - Aorist. The Second Aorist is formed from the Second Aorist Active, by changing ov into ijv as, STUTIOV, ITUTIJV.
Page 68 - The third person plural is formed from the third person singular by inserting v before rai, as jcÉ^cirœi, к'ырмгои.
Page 52 - The First Future is formed from the Present, by changing the last syllable in the first conjugation into \¡r<a ; as голтш, rú\¡f<a.
Page 73 - IIVUM. first Aorist. The first aorist is formed from the first aorist active, by adding p/iv ; as, efv^a, eTin^apTv.
Page 68 - The First Aorist is formed from the Third Person Singular of the Perfect, by dropping the Reduplication, changing ты into $w, and the preceding Soft into an Aspirata Mute, as тЬ Three Verbs assume <r, ¿(palat, ЕрУ«и6^ ; f*¿/*vnJ*«j \p.mv/ ; 7гЕ7гЛя1«1, 1тгЛя<г9я>'.
Page 84 - Voice. (1) THE PRESENT (passive and middle) is formed from the Present Active, by changing its final -a» in -o/*«t/ as ivmca, tvmo(UU.
Page 54 - The First Aorist active is formed from the Future by changing w into a, and prefixing the augment ; as, Tinfrш, ê-nnjr-a.
Page 17 - SouXomi1/y []!¡HT,jrn, but the Arabians by no means submitted to the Persians, so as to be their slaves. Herod. iii. 88. § 137. A Dative is sometimes put with the omission of the preposition aùv, especially where the pronoun avroç is found ; as TÍjX' avrij TríjXчKt каp)j ßаXt, he flung to a distance the head with the helmet itself.
Page 20 - StSaarat, but the things which we carried off from the cities, these have been divided. Hom. II. i. 125. Whence even among the Attics the Relative put Demonstratively sometimes occurs, especially in the forms i5 S...