From the Back Cover:
The Morphology of Biblical Greek explains, in a way second–year Greek students can understand, how Greek words are formed. It shows that Greek word formation follows a limited set of rules. Once these rules are understood, it becomes clear that forms which once seemed to be irregular or an exception actually follow these morphological rules. The Morphology of Biblical Greek has five parts: The rules that determine how Greek words change. The rules of verb formation, from augment to personal ending. Paradigms for every type of noun and adjective form, with all the words that belong in each category and any peculiarities of a given word. All the verbs and principal parts, with verbsthat follow the same rules grouped together. An index of all words in the New Testament with their morphological category. The Morphology of Biblical Greek contains the most complete set of paradigms for nouns, verbs, adjectives, and pronouns available for New Testament Greek. Pradis features include the following: Pradis does the research for you by relating words to topics found in other Pradis resources you own. All you have to do is use your mouse to right–click on a word and select “Related Topics...” to see if there are other articles that contain that same word. If there is, just click on it to open that topic. Bible references hyperlink to your favorite translation (sold separately). You can search the entire resource for a word or phrase and even references to the Bible. Printing is easy, just click on the print icon and choose the entire section or just part of the section. You can copy and paste any portion of a Pradis resource into your word processor to help you in your personal or professional study.
About the Author:
William D. Mounce (PhD, Aberdeen University) lives as a writer in Camas, Washington. He is the Vice President of Educational Development at BibleGateway.com and the president of Biblical Training, a nonprofit organization offering the finest in evangelical teaching to the world. See BillMounce.com for more information. Formerly he was the preaching pastor at a church in Spokane, a professor of New Testament and director of the Greek program at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, and a professor of New Testament at Azusa Pacific University. He is the author of the bestselling New Testament Greek resources, Basics of Biblical Greek, and served as the New Testament chair of the English Standard Version translation of the Bible.
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