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Answer Key *Dont shoot me if the answers are wrong, its always good to check for yourself.

That being said I am pretty sure these are all right. Corrections welcome. Chapter 1 1) Self explanatory 2) , , , , , , / considered short for accent purposes if no letters come after them 3) Iota subscript 4) It changes to a Greek v sound. Example: pronounced (ang-el-os) 5) Smooth and rough/ the smooth does nothing, the rough places a h sound before the word (Look in the book for the right symbols if you dont remember) 6) / 7) / 8) // Bonus: Learn when to shorten or lengthen a vowel observation of individual cases 9) Acute/ Grave/ Circumflex (Look in the book for the symbols) 10) Acute can go on any of the last three syllables. The grave only on the last syllable. Circumflex can go on the last two *Go read Machen handout for rules, its all right there. 11) All caps, no spaces between words, no regular punctuation 12) Question mark 13) A high dot is a Greek semi-colon. Chapter 2 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) The lexical form is how the noun or verb appears in a lexicon (dictionary) Nouns are always listed as nominative singular N/A Take the eta or the alpha off of the lexical form Alpha endings in the singular are found only on nouns whose stems end in iota () or rho () 6) People or places, abstract nouns refer to things 7) Adjectives or participles that function like nouns 8) In the endings 9) Gender 10) Abstract ideas or qualities 11) Identifies the nouns function in the sentence 12) Nominative, Genitive, Dative, Accusative 13) Nominative: I, we / Genitive: of (possession) / Dative: to/for me or you Accusative: me us 14) Anarthrous

15) It wants to stay on the same syllable as the lexical form has it on 16) Persistent 17) Lexical Form, gender, case, number, translation Chapter 3 1) The articles usually. neuter and is masculine. 2) Grammatical *Generally, the lexical form and the article will be what you need to get the gender. 3) Vocative 4) Direct address to someone. Chapter 4 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) Verb stem, variable root, ending Remove the or the off of the verbs lexical form and you have the stem / is used before a / is used before anything else Through different endings -- A moveable nu is just a pronunciation aid, found on the third person regular form of a verbs ending. 8) No 9) An active verb is one that indicates the subject is doing the action 10) A stative verb states something about the subject 11) The subject of the verb 12) When the subject receives the action the verb is passive 13) Lexical form ends in , it is an alternative verb ending for the present active meaning 14) vs. 15) Communicates that an action or state is in progress, continued, repeated, or attempted 16) Mood is just the description of the authors or speakers attitude toward the utterance 17) Indicative 18) On the same syllable as found in the lexical form unless a long ending forces it towards the ultima 19) Lexical form, tense, voice, mood, person, number, translation *I, you, he/she/it we, yall, they Chapter 5 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) A temporal prefix 3rd singular imperfect active A time indicator which indicates a past event Put an on the front of it Put an on the front of it or alternately sometimes an depending on the verb

6) Euphony principle 7) Lengthen the alpha to eta and the iota becomes subscript 8) / / / *I, you, he/she/it we, yall, they 9) Its recessive so it goes on the antepenult unless the ultima is long 10) The accent moves to the penult Chapter 6 1) A contract verb Greek irregular verbs that have a contraction 2) In , , *Keys for recognition: Circumflex over contraction, accent has run to the ultima or penult, sometimes an extra letter in the verb ending 3) Find the circumflex 4) It negates the indicative verb

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