Warning. You will have to memorize
things to get the most out of this blog. I’m sure you can find websites that
will say you don’t, and I hope you will use them if that’s what you want.
I said last week that John White’s
First Greek Book had useful paradigms. The grammar explanations are old-think
and are not complete. White’s online text is locked against editing; that’s why
I give you page numbers, you can’t set your own “here” notes inside it.
And for your first task, turn to White’s
paradigms, his page 234, section 758. Memorize the definite article. White has
a couple of dozen sample paradigms for nouns, which will be hard to memorize
and at any rate are not as useful as the old grammarians thought they were. But
memorize the article and, when the writer uses it, you will know for sure what gender,
number, and case the noun is in. Now go through the first section of Thucydides
and identify all the articles.
The declension of Greek nouns is
rather Protean. Proteus was an old Greek god who could assume many forms. Nouns
take many forms in declension, but the article only takes the one set of forms.
Of course, not all nouns come with
definite articles. Once you know the plural forms of the definite article, you
know the plural endings of many noun declensions. The two facts combined will
help you with something like 75% of nouns. The plural endings also work for
adjectives and some verbal derivatives that you used to call participles (I’ll
label them something else), so that helps you recognize about 80% of non-verbs.
I won’t give you reasons for everything
I ask you to memorize. I will try to put the important or high-frequency ones
first.
So that’s enough for this week. Next
week we’ll get started on revolutionizing the verb structure in Classical
Greek.
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