Elementary Greek : an introduction to the study of Attic Greek . Elementary Greek §25 K = G v = y ai = ae (pronounce e) OL=oe (pronounce e) €1=2 or e ov = u ?€?? = ???3 ?????=???\?& ????? = Cyms ??????? = Ariaeus ? ???????? = Oedipus Aa/3€to9 = Darms; Atma?^Aeneas ???????=: C7rania In the second declension os, ov, oi (nom. plu.) = us, um,and ? e• g• Ki)/jos = CyrMS, IXiov=Iliiim; ?????? = irregular English forms have become fixed; e. , Athens; ???????????, Aristotle; ??????, Plato;??????, Homer. 26. Transliterate and mark the accented syllable of theEnglish form of ??????,


Elementary Greek : an introduction to the study of Attic Greek . Elementary Greek §25 K = G v = y ai = ae (pronounce e) OL=oe (pronounce e) €1=2 or e ov = u ?€?? = ???3 ?????=???\?& ????? = Cyms ??????? = Ariaeus ? ???????? = Oedipus Aa/3€to9 = Darms; Atma?^Aeneas ???????=: C7rania In the second declension os, ov, oi (nom. plu.) = us, um,and ? e• g• Ki)/jos = CyrMS, IXiov=Iliiim; ?????? = irregular English forms have become fixed; e. , Athens; ???????????, Aristotle; ??????, Plato;??????, Homer. 26. Transliterate and mark the accented syllable of theEnglish form of ??????, ®????8?8??, ????<?, KeXatvai,?????????, ???????????, ?^??????, ?^????, ????^???, ®??????^??????, ???????, ?????????? (P:=Iih). 27. In most modern editions capitals are used only withproper nouns (and with proper adjectives), and at the be-ginning of paragraphs and direct Fig. 1.—Capturing Wild Cattle LESSON IThe Verb. Introductory 28. The verb has three voices: active, middle, and pas-sive. The middle voice indicates that the subject acts uponhimself or for his own advantage. Except in two tenses(future and aorist), the forms of the middle and passive areidentical, ??????, he shows; ???????? (middle), he shows him-self, appears; ???????? (passive), he is shown. 29. There are four finite moods: the indicative, sub-junctive, optati?^e, and imperative. The verb has alsoinfinitives, participles, and verbal adjectives. 30. There are seven tenses: the present, imperfect, aorist,future, perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect. The present,future, perfect, and future perfect are called primary (or prin-cipal) tenses; the imperfect, aorist, and pluperfect refer tothe past and are called secondary (or historical) tenses. 31. In general the Greek tenses correspond in meaningto those in Latin. The aorist takes the place of the histori-calelementarygreeki00burg


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