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part:
chapter:
section:
1. PRESENT SYSTEM
II. FUTURE SYSTEM
III. FIRST (SIGMATIC>) AORIST SYSTEM
IV. SECOND AORIST SYSTEM
V. FIRST (K) PERFECT SYSTEM
VI. SECOND PERFECT SYSTEM
VII. PERFECT MIDDLE SYSTEM
VIII. FIRST PASSIVE SYSTEM (
ΘΗ
PASSIVE)
IX. SECOND PASSIVE SYSTEM (H PASSIVE)
PERIPHRASTIC FORMS
FIRST CONJUGATION OR VERBS IN
Ω
INFLECTION OF
Ω-
VERBS
SECOND CONJUGATION OR VERBS IN MI
PRESENT SYSTEM
IRREGULAR MI-VERBS
subsection:
PRESENT AND IMPERFECT ACTIVE AND MIDDLE (PASSIVE)
FUTURE ACTIVE AND MIDDLE (
532 f
f.). FUTURE PERFECT (
580 f
f.)
FIRST AND SECOND FUTURE PASSIVE (
589
,
597
)
FIRST AORIST ACTIVE AND MIDDLE (
542
)
FIRST AND SECOND AORIST PASSIVE (
585
,
590
)
SECOND AORIST ACTIVE AND MIDDLE (
546
)
FIRST AND SECOND PERFECT AND PLUPERFECT ACTIVE (
555
,
561
)
PERFECT AND PLUPERFECT MIDDLE AND PASSIVE (
574
)
This text is part of:
Table of Contents:
Part I: Letters, Sounds, Syllables, Accent
Part II: Inflection
Part IV: Syntax
ADVERBIAL COMPLEX SENTENCES
(
2193
-
2487
)
ADJECTIVE CLAUSES
(
RELATIVE CLAUSES:
2488-
2573
)
[*] 668 D. Hom. has both sets of endings, but that in αι is rarer. In the drama -ειας is very much commoner than -αις. -αις is most frequent in Plato and Xenophon, less common in poetry, and very rare in the orators. Neither Thuc. nor Hdt. has -αις. -αι is rare in prose, most examples being in Plato and Demosthenes. Hdt. has no case. In Aristotle -αι is as common as -ειε. -αῖεν is very rare in poetry, in Thuc. and Hdt., but slightly better represented in Xenophon and the orators. -ειαν is probably the regular form in the drama.—The forms in -ειας, -ειε, -ειαν are called “Aeolic,” but do not occur in the remains of that dialect.
American Book Company, 1920.
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