1 See Giles, Manual”, 264 if. I might add here that Dr Giles thinks the dual may have been originally a specialised form of the plural, used (as in Homer always) to describe natural or artificial pairs. That this is its earliest extant ...
The use of pas . . . on for oudeis 12°, and of ou . . . pote for oupote r21 is infalliny a Hebraism, and so is the phrase shall they be found 31°, for the passive of the verb to find is in Hebrew the equivalent of the verb to be (cf.
T represents the article since it most o en begins with a τ. For this convention see Funk §6840.2; and note Daniel Wallace's use of TSKS for Granville Sharp's rule (ExSyn, 270–90; BNTSyn, 120–28; Granville Sharp's Canon and Its Kin: ...
Praise for A Grammar of New Testament Greek: "The most comprehensive account of the language of the New Testament ever produced by British scholars." --The Expository Times>
A Grammar of New Testament Greek: Syntax
"A beginning-intermediate grammar that covers the morphological and syntactical material most commonly met when reading texts written in Koine Greek, such as the New Testament, the Septuagint, and the Apostolic Fathers"--
Praise for A Grammar of New Testament Greek: "The most comprehensive account of the language of the New Testament ever produced by British scholars." --The Expository Times>