A First Greek Course Containing Delectus, Exercise-Book and Vocabularies Adapted to Greek Grammar by George Curtius; For the Use of the Lower Forms in Private and Public Schools
A First Greek Course Containing Delectus, Exercise-Book and Vocabularies Adapted to Greek Grammar by George Curtius; For the Use of the Lower Forms in Private and Public Schools
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1898 Excerpt: ...is lengthened in the singular: as Stem. Present. rra 1-o-Ttj-jxi (for (ti-otij-lii), I set. Qf Ti-0r-ii, J place. 80 blSa-pi, I give. The conjugation of the Present, Imperfect, and Second Aorist of these verbs is given on the following pages. The other tenses given below are conjugated like the verbs in o. 1. The ...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1898 Excerpt: ...is lengthened in the singular: as Stem. Present. rra 1-o-Ttj-jxi (for (ti-otij-lii), I set. Qf Ti-0r-ii, J place. 80 blSa-pi, I give. The conjugation of the Present, Imperfect, and Second Aorist of these verbs is given on the following pages. The other tenses given below are conjugated like the verbs in o. 1. The tyrant was afraid lest the citizens might revolt. 2. The treaty having been broken, the whole city was reduced to the greatest danger. 3. The king ordered those who-had-stood-up to be silent. 4. We will set guards before the gates, that we may not be besieged. 5. We confess that we made your allies revolt. 6. It is fitting that they should set up a statue of the poet. 7. Would that he might stand by us! 8. Having set up a trophy, they departed. 9. Those who-revolted are said to have been conquered. 10. Let not the king establish his own son in (els) command. Perfect and Pluperfect. loTTjxa, -as, -e, are the only forms in common use of the Perf. in--a. For the remainder of the tense the following forms, as though from a 2 Perf. eara-a, are employed. Indie. icTTarov, corarov, lura/iev, ia-rare, orao-t(v). Imperat. taraOi, eXTaVa. Pluperf. iurrrjKTq, -77s, - i(v) Subj. earS), o-Tip. v, eoruari(v). or 0-7-77107, -779, - i(v), Infin. eordvai. tcrraTov, ioTarrjv, Part. -rros, corwo-a, rorais or-os. faTa/acv, loTare, forao-av. Gen. eoTwos, koTwrrp, etc. 61. In the Indirect Statement, after the Historic tenses of verbs of hoping and promising, instead of a Future Infinitive, av (giving the meaning of 'would') is often used with an Aorist Infinitive, as rJXirioj' avjw av vuajVai, I hoped that he would conquer. B.--1. ird.rr)i vpovoia1: 77 rv)(rj cWaTaiTepa KaOeo-TTjKtv. 2. is rutv cpikocr6p(av ivojxitfi Trdvra tK irupos
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