Sunday, September 23, 2007

Class Notes: September 22, 2007

Class Notes and Comments

Lesson 14: Important Sections and points (but read all the Sections):

90. See the Sidebar for the vocabulary list of all words, including the extra words, as well as for audio files of the vocabulary. ειδον is the 2nd Aorist of οραω, a word you'll meet in Lesson 21 when you're introduced to "Contract Verbs" - i.e., verbs whose stems ends in α (αγαπαω), ε (ποιεω), or ο (πληροω), which contract with the connecting ε or ο per the chart in Lesson 21 Section 146.

91. Read this.

92., 93. and 94. Memorize the 2nd Aorist Active and Middle Indicative and Active and Middle Infinitive. The endings are the same as for the Imperfect Active and Middle/Passive (Lesson 10 Section 65 and Lesson 11 Section 70.). The Aorist Passive is a separate form that you'll learn in Lesson 16 (but I've already given it to you on the Indicative Verbs Chart). Also, even though the 2nd Aorist Active and Middle Infinitive have the same endings as the Present Active and Middle/Passive Infinitives (i.e., -ειν and -εσθαι), the accent is not on the verb stem but on the -ειν ending of the Active Infinitive and on the -εσ of the -εσθαι ending of the Middle Infinitive.

95. Memorize all these forms of 2nd Aorists. Read the "final note" about the verbs that are a mix of 1st and 2nd Aorists.

96. Do all the Exercises and check your answers. See the Sidebar for Exercises Answers. For the English to Greek Exercises, you can refer to the "Greek to English Vocabulary" section in the back of the book for aorist forms of verbs to see if you figured them out correctly. Alternatively, you can look at the Principal Parts lists in the Greek New Testament Insert or look up the verbs in the Dictionary in the back of your Greek New Testament. (Note: if a verb is regular in its principal parts formation, the textbook and the GNT Dictionary may not list the principal parts.)

Memorize the Present Active Participle forms, as shown on the Present Active Participle Chart in the Sidebar, noting the 3rd Declension endings as shown in the Chart. I also gave you a copy of the chart at class September 22.

Our reading next week will continue at Mark 2, if we continue in Mark. I'm thinking, though, that we may start the Gospel of John, as you've now learned a lot of the forms (imperfects, aorists) that would have made it too difficult before.

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