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Episodes
- S1 E1 - The Greek Alphabet & PronunciationMarch 3, 201634minLearn the 24 letters of the Greek alphabet using the restored classical pronunciation, recognizing that there was some variation in pronunciation in the ancient world. Practice the pairings of vowels called diphthongs, and sound out a selection of words that you will soon be reading in sentences.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E2 - First-Declension NounsMarch 3, 201631minDiscover that Greek nouns have gender and their endings supply a host of information, such as whether the case is nominative, genitive, dative, or accusative—a function usually performed by word order or prepositions in English. Begin with the eight noun endings of the primarily feminine first declension.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E3 - Basic Rules of Greek AccentuationMarch 3, 201632minInvented over two thousand years ago by Aristophanes of Byzantium, head of the Library of Alexandria, accents are important clues to the pronunciation of Greek words, and they often provide other crucial information. Learn the rules for the three types of accents: acute, grave, and circumflex.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E4 - Additional Patterns of the First DeclensionMarch 3, 201631minLook at two variations in the pattern of the first declension—one used in Homeric Greek and the other in Koine, the Greek of the New Testament. Despite being separated by almost a thousand years, the two dialects have remarkable continuity.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E5 - Verbs in the Present TenseMarch 3, 201630minGreek verbs can be described in terms of person, number, tense, voice, and mood. In this lesson, focus on verbs that are present active indicative. Learn that voice, person, and number are indicated by endings on the verb base. For the present tense, these are called primary endings.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E6 - Adjective Forms & Second-Declension NounsMarch 3, 201630minSo far, you have studied first-declension nouns, which are mainly feminine. Now expand your range into masculine and neuter nouns, many of which use second-declension endings. Practice these endings together with their adjectival forms in words that you will encounter in Homer.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E7 - Building Basic Translation SkillsMarch 3, 201630minReview what you have learned up until now. Then try your hand at translating from English to Greek—first into Homeric Greek and then into Koine, noticing the key differences between the two dialects. Close by reading the opening passage of the Gospel of John in its unadapted original Koine.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E8 - First- & Second-Declension PronounsMarch 3, 201631minDelve deeper into the first and second declensions, discovering that the endings for demonstrative adjectives and pronouns differ in only minor ways from those for nouns. Practice using different types of pronouns, and learn that they underwent a fascinating evolution from Homeric Greek to Koine.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E9 - Verbs in the Imperfect TenseMarch 3, 201631minGreek has several ways of talking about the past. Focus on the imperfect tense, which describes an action that was ongoing in the past - for example, "The Achaeans were dishonoring the gods." The imperfect is built by adding a vowel prefix, called an augment, to the verb base, plus secondary endings.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E10 - Verbs in the Future & Aorist TensesMarch 3, 201631minLearn two new tenses: the future and aorist. In the process, encounter the concept of principal parts, which are indispensable for recognizing different tenses. Concentrate on the first three principal parts for regular verbs (present and imperfect, future, and aorist). Also inspect some irregular verbs.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E11 - First-Declension Masculine NounsMarch 3, 201629minAlthough first declension nouns are generally feminine, some masculine nouns also fall into this class. Learn how to recognize them (as well as the declensions of all nouns) from the nominative and genitive forms supplied in Greek dictionaries. Then investigate some finer points of compound verbs.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E12 - The Root AoristMarch 3, 201629minThe aorist is a past tense that makes no reference to the duration or completion of an action, and focuses instead on the simple act. In Lesson 10, you learned the morphology of the first aorist. Now study the second aorist and root aorist. Analyze examples of all three aorist tenses in the New Testament and Homer.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E13 - Third-Declension NounsMarch 3, 201632minEncounter the third and final declension, focusing, as usual, on the genitive, which is the key to identifying the declension. This is especially important with the third declension, since the noun base is not obvious from the nominative form. Then make your final preparations to read Homer's Iliad in unadapted Greek.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E14 - Understanding Dactylic HexameterMarch 3, 201629minRead the first five lines of Homer’s Iliad, focusing on vocabulary and grammar. Then investigate the quality that makes Homer a great poet: his use of sound and meter. Homer composed in dactylic hexameter, which was used throughout antiquity. Learn the rules that govern this epic meter.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E15 - Practicing Dactylic HexameterMarch 3, 201632minPractice reciting the first five lines of the Iliad, hearing how the meter enhances the meaning of the text. Then study third declension neuter endings, and read three verses of unadapted New Testament Greek, covering the conversation between the angel Gabriel and Mary in Luke 1:32-34.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E16 - The Middle/Passive Voice: Present & FutureMarch 3, 201631minGo deeper into Homer with lines 6-10 of the Iliad. Then discover the middle and passive voices. The passive operates as in English, with the subject receiving the action of the verb. However, English doesn’t have a middle voice, which in Greek signals that the subject is acting in its own interest.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E17 - Aorist & Imperfect Middle/PassiveMarch 3, 201632minIn the previous lesson, you learned the primary middle/passive endings, which are used for the present and future tenses. Now compare these to the secondary middle/passive endings, which are used for past tenses. Then read lines 11-16 of the Iliad, learning new rules for scanning dactylic hexameter.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E18 - Perfect & Pluperfect ActiveMarch 3, 201630minLearn the fourth principal part, which governs the formation of the perfect and pluperfect tenses. Discover the great utility of these past tenses for talking about completed action. Study an example of the perfect in John 3:13, and read lines 17-21 of the Iliad.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E19 - Forming and Using InfinitivesMarch 3, 201630minStudy the fifth principal part, which forms the basis of the perfect and pluperfect middle/passive, and the sixth and final principal part, which forms the basis of the aorist passive. Then learn how to construct the infinitive in different tenses, looking at examples in Homer and the New Testament.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E20 - Active ParticiplesMarch 3, 201631minParticiples are verbal adjectives. Like verbs, they have tense and voice. Like adjectives, they agree in case, number, and gender with the nouns they modify. Learn to form participles in different tenses of the active voice. Study examples in the Gospel of Matthew and in your reading of lines 22-27 of the Iliad.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E21 - Middle/Passive ParticiplesMarch 3, 201631minMove on to middle/passive participles. Greek participles pack a lot of meaning into a single word that may require an entire clause to translate into English. Look at examples from two different verses in Matthew as well as your Homeric reading for this lesson: lines 28-32 of the Iliad.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E22 - The Perfect System in the Middle/PassiveMarch 3, 201632minLearn to form the perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect middle/passive tenses on the basis of the fifth principal part. Study examples in Matthew and Luke. Then read lines 33-37 of the Iliad, which includes a stirring scene “along the shore of the much-roaring sea.”Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E23 - The Subjunctive MoodMarch 3, 201632minLearn to form the perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect middle/passive tenses on the basis of the fifth principal part. Study examples in Matthew and Luke. Then read lines 33-37 of the Iliad, which includes a stirring scene "along the shore of the much-roaring sea."Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E24 - The Imperative Mood, ActiveMarch 3, 201630minEncounter the imperative mood—the verb construction used for commands. Study the imperative endings in the present and aorist tenses. Find three aorist commands in Luke 22:36, and even more as you continue your reading of the Iliad with lines 39-47.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
- S1 E25 - The Imperative Mood, Middle/PassiveMarch 3, 201632minLearn to form imperatives in the middle/passive, looking at examples in Matthew 3:2 and John 14:1. Note that in Homeric Greek the imperative and other verb endings tend to be uncontracted. Then read the Iliad lines 48-52, experiencing the devastation wrought by Apollo’s silver bow.Free trial of The Great Courses Living or buy
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