Biblical Greek - Lesson 21 - 1st declension genitive singular nouns - Free Greek

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
  • Learn the genitive singular case endings for first declension nouns and a little bit of geography!
    Listen to the audio at anchor.fm/alph...
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    In partnership with Aleph with Beth and SIL International.
    Film clips: Assassin's Creed Odyssey
    Illustrations of ancient house used with permission from Biblingo
    Music: Azeezah - John Bilezikjian

Комментарии • 23

  • @reepicheepsfriend
    @reepicheepsfriend Год назад +3

    Wonderful! So easy to remember everything, the way you present it. Thanks for your efforts.

  • @dthomson8619
    @dthomson8619 Месяц назад

    I do not always remember to hit the "Like" button, but I do love every single video. I can say this without reservation: I have used several RUclips Greek teaching channels and also for Spanish, and Hebrew,but THIS channel AND the Hebrew Aleph with Beth are the very best language teaching channels that I have ever found. Thank you so much! God bless you Angella!

    • @AlphawithAngela
      @AlphawithAngela  Месяц назад

      What a nice comment! Thank you from Alpha with Angela and from Aleph with Beth. We are so glad that you enjoy the lessons and are benefitting from them. Blessings!

  • @partakerofbread
    @partakerofbread 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for your contribution to Ancient Greek language learning. These videos are very helpful!

  • @AlephwithBeth
    @AlephwithBeth Год назад +1

    Great lesson!!!

  • @bvochelet
    @bvochelet 9 месяцев назад

    Merci pour cette leçon.

  • @jackclements2163
    @jackclements2163 Год назад +1

    Thank you! 😊

  • @attifab365
    @attifab365 Год назад +1

    Grazie tantissime. Bravissima!!!!

  • @martinm.salinas8347
    @martinm.salinas8347 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much 🥰

  • @dezukaful
    @dezukaful Год назад +1

    οιμοι!! καινη διδαχη
    Thank you Angela

  • @singgreekandhebrew
    @singgreekandhebrew Год назад +1

    Thanks for another helpful episode 🙏

  • @beebell7288
    @beebell7288 Год назад

    Welcome back, Angela! Thanks a million for this great lesson 🙏🌹❤️

  • @Peter-md9mf
    @Peter-md9mf Год назад

    Thank you so much, Angela. And thank you for the vocabulary list. It’s been very helpful to keep track

  • @withouthands
    @withouthands Год назад

    Thank you for the great lesson! I like how you sometimes present the sound of a word before displaying its written form - it keeps the viewer engaged.

  • @peterbrown3004
    @peterbrown3004 Год назад +1

    Escribo El primer comentario: mil gracias por seguir produciendo estas lecciones!

  • @realmysticism
    @realmysticism Год назад

    Thank you very much! Wonderful. as usual.

  • @Jeannnnf
    @Jeannnnf Год назад

    Ωραία!

  • @briancoles4249
    @briancoles4249 Год назад +1

    Hey Angela I just wanted to tell you that I was watching basketball on TV and a commercial for Subway was showing a sandwich and I thought “artos”

  • @adibyoukhana
    @adibyoukhana Год назад

    keep up the good work

  • @peterbrown3004
    @peterbrown3004 Год назад

    Esta vez entendi casi 100&. Gracias al metodo no ando muy lejos de mi meta.Gracias a ti y a Scorpio Martianus

  • @pierreabbat6157
    @pierreabbat6157 Год назад +1

    First instance of Grassmann's law. Why doesn't it apply to θριψ?

    • @AlphawithAngela
      @AlphawithAngela  Год назад +4

      Sorry Pierre, I don't have time to answer these kind of questions. It is too time consuming and also not something my students need to worry about at this point. Here is the best I can offer for right now. Grassmann’s Law was a sound change in the Classical period (or before?), and it only involved aspirated consonants, not affricates like ψ. It changed forms like *tʰrikʰ+es to (Classical) /trikʰ+es/ (which became Koine /trix+es/), dropping the aspiration from a consonant if the following consonant was also aspirated. It would have been just an allophonic rule (/tʰrikʰ+es/ ® [trikʰes]), if there hadn’t been a phonemic contrast between tʰ and t, but since there was a phonemic contrast, we can say it changed the underlying form of that word form (or at least neutralized the contrast in that environment). How to state it depends on which phonological theory you’re using. However, the suffix -s in /tʰrikʰ+s/ changed /kʰ/ to /k/ before Grassmann’s Law could apply, and since there was no longer a sequence of two aspirated consonants, Grassmann’s Law had no effect. So the preceding *tʰ remained /tʰ/ in Classical Greek, which then became /θ/ in Koine.