you all probably dont give a shit but does anybody know of a way to log back into an instagram account?? I was stupid forgot the password. I love any tips you can give me
@Brentley Alfredo thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site thru google and im waiting for the hacking stuff atm. Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
Erasmus was a Dutch fellow, not German. Even the Erasmian pronunciation does not permit or require a glottal stop between the accented vowel and the final vowel when pronouncing contract verbs. The two should glide smoothly from one to the other. Erasmian pronunciation, in general, would sound like a real human language if the speaker would scrupulously observe the accents - which many people do not. The middle form used as an active form has a simple explanation. Some Greek dialects used what looks like the passive-middle form of the verb to express active indicative actions. When adopted by other dialects, and especially when blended into the Koine dialect, no one felt the need to change them from the middle-passive -μι or -ομαι forms to the -ω form to express transitive actions. That is why some --μι verbs have no separate active-indicative forms. It's not that the active -ω forms fell out of use. In some instances, they never existed.
at 38:37 the imperative is "disciple," not make. There is no Greek word for "make" - The correct translation is "Therefore, having gone, disciple all the nations"
@@kenschenck Hi Ken, Matthew did not record that Jesus said, "make disciples" - the imperative here was "(plural - disciple" not "make" or "make disciples" - big difference. Translation error. Translations have been influenced by Evangelicalism and Mt 28:19 is a prime example of focusing on "individual salvation" or "individual discipleship" central to Evangelicalism. There is no way around the Greek, Jesus' imperative in Mt 28:19 was "disciple all the nations." Your videos are excellent though. >
In the verb tenses section, I noticed that there is "continuous" and "uncertain" kinds of action covered. Where would "discontinuous" action lie, or do the Greeks of the time period not possess a means to communicate punctiliar activity?
Here's a helpful hint for y'all: unless you want to write or speak your own NT Greek, you only need to learn the definite article, no declensions. Thank you.
λύω is pronounced Lee-o like the zodiac sign Leo, not LU-o. Pronounced like this it would be written λούω which actually is a different word that means to wash the head
@@kenschenck First of all thank you for taking the time to adress my comment, that's very polite of you and means a lot to me. Secondly, i would like to express my sympathy and appreciation for your noble, hard, but worthy effort of teaching the Greek language. High thoughts demand high language therefore i must insist on this: according to your pronounciation how can we differentiate between the words λύω and λούω?
@@kenschenckAs far as i am informed, the letter υ (ύψιλον) in Greek is pronounced EE, at least since the formation of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) empire, and the first ecumenical council of Nicea 325 AD where all these passages (Gospels) are being classified by the Christian scholars. It would be anachronistic to read Koine (Byzantine) using a classical (Attic) dialect pronounciation. Nevertheless what we are discussing is of minor importance and diminishes the fact that by learning Greek the brain forms the synapses that allow a more complete and genuine comprehension of almost every science, art and philosophy, including theology which is the case here. Therefore i once more salute your efforts and wish you the best.
Thank You. I TRIED to be a NT Greek tutor in the 1980s. Unfortunately the "Yuppie" generation was NOT interested,so I studied join for 4 yrs for nothing or you would say "oude"(Nothing g
@@philipbuckley759 Yeah if you're intense, you can trace a koine lexical form BACK through Septuagint Greek,classical Greek,Attic Greek,to Linear B and use Deissman's papyri studies for profane(secular) usages of your target word.But I'm old and lazy, so I just use the back of Strongs concordance and my Nestle/Aland comes with a short readers lexicon in the back.👍
It's a very minor point, and not at all about Greek, but since you mentioned pronunciation, I just wanted to note that you're saying "ProNOWNciation," whereas it's proNUNciation.
Why not use a historical restored pronunciation? A lot of work has gone into rescuing us from Erasmian pronunciation with a dreadful Anglophone accent.
I don't know which I like most about you: how informative you have been or how hilarious you are. Thank you for making the lesson fun.
you all probably dont give a shit but does anybody know of a way to log back into an instagram account??
I was stupid forgot the password. I love any tips you can give me
@Coen Princeton Instablaster :)
@Brentley Alfredo thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site thru google and im waiting for the hacking stuff atm.
Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Brentley Alfredo it worked and I now got access to my account again. I am so happy:D
Thank you so much, you really help me out!
@Coen Princeton glad I could help :)
Thank you Ken, very helpful. This should be the first lesson of the semester!
This is a great idea for a video. I only wish that it was just as quick to upload all of this information into our brain in the first place. :)
Thanks a lot. I am repeating the greek grammar from a course I took a couple of years ago. Makes me want to continue!
Erasmus was a Dutch fellow, not German.
Even the Erasmian pronunciation does not permit or require a glottal stop between the accented vowel and the final vowel when pronouncing contract verbs. The two should glide smoothly from one to the other. Erasmian pronunciation, in general, would sound like a real human language if the speaker would scrupulously observe the accents - which many people do not.
The middle form used as an active form has a simple explanation. Some Greek dialects used what looks like the passive-middle form of the verb to express active indicative actions. When adopted by other dialects, and especially when blended into the Koine dialect, no one felt the need to change them from the middle-passive -μι or -ομαι forms to the -ω form to express transitive actions. That is why some --μι verbs have no separate active-indicative forms. It's not that the active -ω forms fell out of use. In some instances, they never existed.
Great info! What pronunciation system do you use?
Thank you for the video lessons, it's always a good thing to review Greek grammar and in this video you covered the Greek grammar.
Excellent teaching .God bless you.
Appreciate the video class!!
It’s very helpful!!
God bless you.
1Life- Live4Christ hi sir good to see you here :) hosaase
How can you leave the verb endings out of this review? Thank you for posting this video.
i want to thank you. Professor this will help me in my dream of mastering all forms of greek, that i have at least for now. Kalimera, esi kala?
The infinitive can also act as a participle of the same verb type.
The faithful one πιστεύω is not about holding an idea it’s about acting with fidelity.
Very helpful lessons i wish all of us could get this
Nice, Thanks for these lesson
Excellent!
at 38:37 the imperative is "disciple," not make. There is no Greek word for "make" - The correct translation is "Therefore, having gone, disciple all the nations"
Of course, but I'm not translating it as "make" but as "make disciples."
@@kenschenck Hi Ken, Matthew did not record that Jesus said, "make disciples" - the imperative here was "(plural - disciple" not "make" or "make disciples" - big difference. Translation error. Translations have been influenced by Evangelicalism and Mt 28:19 is a prime example of focusing on "individual salvation" or "individual discipleship" central to Evangelicalism. There is no way around the Greek, Jesus' imperative in Mt 28:19 was "disciple all the nations." Your videos are excellent though.
>
Do you have a forms sheet or system from which all the forms can be generated?
Some people didn't believed that Paul was an apostle.
3:10 Verbs (Person, number, tense...)
In the verb tenses section, I noticed that there is "continuous" and "uncertain" kinds of action covered. Where would "discontinuous" action lie, or do the Greeks of the time period not possess a means to communicate punctiliar activity?
Aorist comes the closest.
Here's a helpful hint for y'all: unless you want to write or speak your own NT Greek, you only need to learn the definite article, no declensions. Thank you.
What do you do when the noun is lacking the article?
The Aorist is did teach, pass. Did become taught get your perfective aspect right! Have/had is the result being present i.e. the perfect tense.
is there a difference between present active indicative, and present active continous....in Koine Greek...
To express present active continuous, you would use present active indicative, but pai can have other nuances as well.
The go is not and never should be rendered as an imperative in Mt 28:20
5:15 7 Greek tenses
λύω is pronounced Lee-o like the zodiac sign Leo, not LU-o. Pronounced like this it would be written λούω which actually is a different word that means to wash the head
Yes, in modern Greek. Theres some debate about exactly when the pronunciation shift happened.
@@kenschenck First of all thank you for taking the time to adress my comment, that's very polite of you and means a lot to me. Secondly, i would like to express my sympathy and appreciation for your noble, hard, but worthy effort of teaching the Greek language. High thoughts demand high language therefore i must insist on this: according to your pronounciation how can we differentiate between the words λύω and λούω?
@@christsagkas8385 Languages dont make things easy for us. For example, many sounds have coalesced into an ee sound in modern Greek.
@@kenschenckAs far as i am informed, the letter υ (ύψιλον) in Greek is pronounced EE, at least since the formation of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) empire, and the first ecumenical council of Nicea 325 AD where all these passages (Gospels) are being classified by the Christian scholars. It would be anachronistic to read Koine (Byzantine) using a classical (Attic) dialect pronounciation. Nevertheless what we are discussing is of minor importance and diminishes the fact that by learning Greek the brain forms the synapses that allow a more complete and genuine comprehension of almost every science, art and philosophy, including theology which is the case here. Therefore i once more salute your efforts and wish you the best.
@@christsagkas8385 My sense is that upsilon was one of the last vowels to itacize.
Thank You. I TRIED to be a NT Greek tutor in the 1980s. Unfortunately the "Yuppie" generation was NOT interested,so I studied join for 4 yrs for nothing or you would say "oude"(Nothing g
unless you used the information, for study.....
@@philipbuckley759 Yeah if you're intense, you can trace a koine lexical form BACK through Septuagint Greek,classical Greek,Attic Greek,to Linear B and use Deissman's papyri studies for profane(secular) usages of your target word.But I'm old and lazy, so I just use the back of Strongs concordance and my Nestle/Aland comes with a short readers lexicon in the back.👍
good..
Quality
It's a very minor point, and not at all about Greek, but since you mentioned pronunciation, I just wanted to note that you're saying "ProNOWNciation," whereas it's proNUNciation.
#ALLAMERICANAVE
2021OCTOBER10 SUNDAY #ALPHASPARTAN9886
Pronunciation not pronounciation
Breathing marks are not letters.Ha is wrong...
i hate people that troll and just look for the mistakes in other people, why don't you read the bible? God bless
Why not use a historical restored pronunciation? A lot of work has gone into rescuing us from Erasmian pronunciation with a dreadful Anglophone accent.
When most NT Greek teachers switch I will. One pedagogical reason is that itacism makes it hard to distinguish letters.
I prefer modern pronunciation myself.
Modern Greek is nicer? That's a nice joke.