The Handy Guide to Difficult and Irregular Greek Verbs: Aids for Readers of the Greek New Testament (The Handy Guide Series)

Download * The Handy Guide to Difficult and Irregular Greek Verbs: Aids for Readers of the Greek New Testament (The Handy Guide Series) PDF by ^ Jon C. Laansma, Randall X. Gauthier eBook or Kindle ePUB Online free. The Handy Guide to Difficult and Irregular Greek Verbs: Aids for Readers of the Greek New Testament (The Handy Guide Series) This resource helps students learn those irregular Greek forms that are otherwise difficult to place. By listing irregular verb tenses from most to least frequently used, it fills an empty niche in the students toolbox. The Handy Guide to Difficult and Irregular Greek Verbs is a learning aid for anyone wishing to master New Testament vocabulary, especially those transitioning from beginning courses in Greek to regular reading of the New Testament. No other such list exists in published form tho

The Handy Guide to Difficult and Irregular Greek Verbs: Aids for Readers of the Greek New Testament (The Handy Guide Series)

Author :
Rating : 4.41 (870 Votes)
Asin : 0825444799
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 80 Pages
Publish Date : 2017-05-11
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

About the Author Editor Douglas S. Huffman is professor and chair of the Department of Biblical and Theological Studies at Northwestern College in Minnesota. . He is the coeditor of God Under Fire: Modern Scholarship Reinvents God

This resource helps students learn those irregular Greek forms that are otherwise difficult to place. By listing irregular verb tenses from most to least frequently used, it fills an empty niche in the student's toolbox. The Handy Guide to Difficult and Irregular Greek Verbs is a learning aid for anyone wishing to master New Testament vocabulary, especially those transitioning from beginning courses in Greek to regular reading of the New Testament. No other such list exists in published form though the necessity of learning irregular verbs is universally recognized. Irregular verbs in Greek are equivalent to the English verb "go" and its past tense "went." The two words aren't intuitively connected, but must be memorized, and the user must know the words are versions of the same verb to find the full entry for "went" in the dictionary. This is an excellent resource for pastors, biblical scholars, and anyone who learned Greek years ago and wants to improve their ease of reading the New Testament.

He is the coeditor of God Under Fire: Modern Scholarship Reinvents God. Huffman is professor and chair of the Department of Biblical and Theological Studies at Northwestern College in Minnesota. . Editor Douglas S

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