Intro to Verbs and Present Active Indicative

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapters X - XVI REVIEW. Neuter Words Some 2 nd declension nouns are neuter These words end with –um or –ium in nominative singular These words end with.
Advertisements

+ The First Declension Latin I. + Declension refers to NOUNS set of endings for nouns that follow a consistent pattern there are 5 Latin declensions each.
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Mood Tense 1Tense 2Parti-MoodSub-Gen.
Mid-Term Review Tobi England Mid-Term Review Tobi England.
C.W. Shelmerdine Introduction to Greek 2 nd edition (Newburyport, MA: Focus, 2008) Chapter 2.
September 22 nd, Singular Nom – um. Gen – i. Dat – o. Acc – um. Abl – o. Plural Nom –a. Gen – orum. Dat – is. Acc – a. Abl – is. Cf. Wheelock, pp.
Getting started with Sanskrit grammar. Inflectional form: Root + Affix = Stem Stem + Inflectional ending = Word.
September 15 th, primary characteristics. Person (1 st person, 2 nd person, 3 rd person). Number (singular, plural). Tense (present, past, future).
Lesson 5 Second Declension Nouns
Introduction to Verbs Chapter 15. Exegetical Insight 1 John 2:1 and 3:6 1 John 2:1 Tekni,a mou( tau/ta gra,fw u`mi/n i[na mh. a`ma,rthteÅ kai. eva,n tij.
Introduction to Verbs (Chapter 15)
Unit 7 Test Review Test yourself to see if you know the answers before you click.
Parts of Speech and Functions of Words.
Understanding Verb Tense in English
Copyright , Scott Gray1 Participles, Part 1 - Aorist Tense Forms in the Active and Middle.
Verb Prep StudyStudyStudy. Verb Functions What kind of words are Verbs? Action Words Verbs also tell what? State of Being.
By: Jeremy Pagnotti.  Phonetic language (no silent letters)  No particular word order  Grammatical function of nouns and verbs displayed by endings.
The Greek Verb System: A Bird’s Eye View Chapter 2.
Parsing and Translating
Present & Future Active Indicative Chapter 3. lu,w lu,eij lu,ei Singular lu,omen lu,ete lu,ousi(n ) Plural I Loose You Loose He Looses We Loose Ya’ll.
English 10 From Writer’s Inc. & Mrs. Eberts
Function English CaseLatin Case 1. a. Subject - who/what verbNominativeNominative b. Predicate Nom noun/pron. after linking verb 2. refers back to.
Learning To Use New Testament Greek
Learning To Use New Testament Greek Lesson VI. apostolos apostle.
First and Second Conjugation Verbs Principal Parts Properties of Verbs: Number, Person, Tense, and Stem The Infinitive Subject and Verb Agreement Latin.
Quote of the Day:  Ditat Deus  “God Enriches”  Arizona State Motto.
Inflection. Inflection refers to word formation that does not change category and does not create new lexemes, but rather changes the form of lexemes.
Latin I Review Cambridge Unit I Fall 2012 Magistra Chadwell.
Greek Nouns: Part 3. 1 st Declension Nouns There are really 6 different types of 1 st declension nouns, most of which are Feminine, but a few are masculine.
The Present Tense of Latin Verbs!
Latin Index Card Project You may give this first card whatever title and decoration you want.
Warm-Up Translate the following sentence into Latin. The master wanted to visit a mine and see the slaves.
Ross Chapter 12 p The Construct Relationship Nouns in sequence The genitive follows a word in the construct state (a syntactical relationship)
Copyright , Scott Gray1 Participles, Part 1 - Focus upon Connection, Present Tense Forms.
GERUND Научный руководитель– Агаева Алия А.. The –ing Forms in English.
Ms. Rasha Ali Inflection.
The Second Declension Masculine.
Introduction to Linguistics
Focus on Fluency Nouns, Adjectives, and pronouns
PARTICIPLES
Lesson XXII.
Perfect Passive Participles
Class XI: Introduction to Verbs Dr. Esa Autero
Latin II Review (part I)
Pronunciation, Syllabification, Punctuation and Intro to Nouns
GREEK ADJECTIVES
All About Verbs!!! TERMS: Person(6) = subject of the verb (see verb chart!) Number(2) = singular or plural Tense(6) = time the action occurs i.e. Present,
Differences between Active and Passive Voice Teacher: Laura Medina
The Infinitive, Part 1 Copyright , Scott Gray.
Lesson XXVI.
Getting started with Sanskrit grammar
Verbs.
The passive voice The Passive is not a tense. You will find it easier to understand the passive if you already know the basic English verb tenses.
I can identify and use SUBJECT PRONOUNS.
Agenda diēs Martis, a.d. xiv Kal. Oct. A.D. MMXVIII
How To Answer Questions in Latin!
Agenda diēs Martis, a.d. vi Non. Oct. A.D. MMXVIII
Agenda diēs Martis, a.d. xiv Kal. Oct. A.D. MMXVIII
Parts of speech.
INTERROGATIVE PRONOUNS
Cristy Prince Sixth Grade
Nonindicative Verbs Moods Middle Voice.
Chapter 5 Introduction to English Nouns Greatest Obstacle for Most!
Verb Synapses MarshLatin.wordpress.com.
English Verbs.
ALI139 – Arabic Grammar I Week 2.
Cambridge Latin Course Unit 2, Stage 18
Bell Work! Dec. 8-12, 2014.
Infinitives Summary/Notes.
Meanings of the voices active: The subject acts. passive:
Presentation transcript:

Intro to Verbs and Present Active Indicative Introduction to Verbs By Stephen Curto For Intro to Greek Oct 2, 2016

Outline Review Intro to Verbs Present Active Indicative

Review Same functions as in English Match the noun in Case, Number, and Gender determined by (1) word order (2) article use (3) context Ways they work (function): Attributive (Describe or Qualify) -3 positions Substantival (Act as a Noun) -no noun Predicate (“Is” Adjective) -no article on “untrapped’ adjective

Review Masculine Feminine Neuter Nom Sing ἀγαθός ἀγαθή ἀγαθόν Gen Sing ἀγαθοῦ ἀγαθῆς Dat Sing ἀγαθῷ ἀγαθῇ Acc Sing ἀγαθήν Declension 2 1 Nom Plur ἀγαθοί ἀγαθαί ἀγαθά Gen Plur ἀγαθῶν Dat Plur ἀγαθοῖς ἀγαθαῖς Acc Plur ἀγαθούς ἀγαθάς

Review Homework - Exercise 9

Intro to Verbs Verbs in English Parsing Components Person Number 1st, 2nd, 3rd “I”, “You”, “He/She/It” Number Singular, Plural “I, You, He/She/It” , “We, Y’all, They” Tense (Time) Past, Present, Future “Bill hit the ball.” “Bill hits the ball.” “Bill will hit the ball.”

Intro to Verbs Verbs in English Parsing Components Voice Active, Passive “Bill hit the ball.” “Bill was hit by the ball.” Aspect (kind of action) Continuous, Completed, Undefined “Bill was hitting the ball.” “Bill hit the ball once.” “Bill hit the ball.” Mood Indicative, Subjunctive, Imperative, and others. “Bill hit the ball.” “Bill might have hit the ball.” “Bill must hit the ball!"

Intro to Verbs Verbs in Greek Parsing Components Person Number Voice 1st, 2nd, 3rd Number Singular, Plural Voice Active, Middle, Passive Mood Indicative, Subjunctive, Imperative, Optative, (Participle), (Infinitive)

Intro to Verbs Verbs in Greek Parsing Components Tense (Time AND Aspect [or “Kind of Action”]) Present, Imperfect, Perfect, Aorist, Future, Pluperfect e.g. Present – Present time and either continuous or undefined aspect. Imperfect – Past time and continuous aspect. Aorist – Past time and undefined aspect. Perfect – Past time and completed aspect.

Present Active Indicative Present Tense Present time and continuous or undefined aspect Active Voice The subject is the actor of the verb Indicative Mood It states a fact. The “How it is” mood. (We won’t see any other moods.)

Present Active Indicative REMEMBER – Parts of a Greek Word Stem. Case Ending. Connecting vowel?

Parts of a Greek Word Stem All Greek words have a stem. Usually the first few letters of the lexical form. E.g. λογος stem: λογ or λογο Case Ending All Greek words have a variety of case endings. They tell you how the word is functioning. E.g. λογος case ending: ς or ος Connecting Vowel? Note that the “o” could be part of the stem or the case ending. This is called the connecting vowel in some systems.

Present Active Indicative Singular Plural 1st Person -ω -ομεν 2nd Person -εις -ετε 3rd Person -ει -ουσι(ν)

Present Active Indicative Singular Plural 1st Person λύω λύομεν 2nd Person λύεις λύετε 3rd Person λύει λύουσι(ν)

Present Active Indicative Singular Plural 1st Person I loose We loose 2nd Person You loose Y’all loose 3rd Person He looses They loose

Present Active Indicative Some Quirks: Moveable nu. the 3rd person plural form of λυω could be λύουσι OR λύουσιν the moveable nu works a lot like the words “a” and “an” in English. the moveable nu sometimes shows up for smoother pronunciation. the moveable nu doesn’t change the meaning.

Present Active Indicative Some Quirks: Agreement A verb always agrees with its subject (noun or pronoun) in Person and Number. e.g. Ἰησους λυει τον ἀνθρωπον. 3rd person singular Jesus looses the man. Ἰησους λυομεν τον ἀνθρωπον. the subject and verb don’t agree so the sentence makes no sense! λυομεν is 1st person plural, but “Jesus” is 3rd person singular.