PA 258 ■ V'^'V* \'^tt % \<^ \°y?^\S* \ **! V4* • £°* ► V * SKS • *2n & *A 4>> « ,«• o_ *; -by v*3KPv ** v, -yj^. aV -^ .JEWS. <&' %, Vi 4°* I* ^f> ^ *. * AV "Sv . h<^ V ><*. U"5 ? v wm , ♦*"*♦ . m* 8 /\ w . ^ O, "o . » * A •* * •- -ov* ** • • * • *,/ ,-»tt ; %/ ••ate- \s ••• ^ ^ W ^ " - • * • ^ ^ ^ ^ < & 4? ******* * V ' * iil% %> *0* ♦ •••* % * VW>^ v#/ \'w ^ 111'. ^ .'Ife W :4wf-. ^ ;£lb & .tf*°- •o.. *•. 4^ ., : % * ^ h 5 s % :- ^ ^ »5°^ ^^ J . ^ ^ •*' THE ELEMENTS OF GREEK GRAMMAR; WITH NOTES FOR THE USE OF THOSE, WHO HAVE MADE SOME PROGRESS IN THE LANGUAGE. Cfje JFourtf) ©jttioru lontion : d Printed by A. J. Valpy, Tooke's Court, Chancery Lane. SOLD BY LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN J LAW ; LACKINGTON AND CO. J RIVINGTONS ; RICHARDSON ; LUNN ; AND DULAU. I J814. Hi ^equaquam me pcenitet hujus studii, quod per hanc recensi- onem in tractatione veterum Grammaticoi'um consumsi. Imo tantum eo me adjutum sentio, non modo ad hoc opus, sed ad oranem facultatem linguae Graecae, neniinem ut arbitrer in Grcecis scriptoribus intelligendis proficere posse, nisi siniili cursu lecti- onis pracepta iilorum collegerit y et ad optimas rationes exami- naverit. Wolfius, Prokg. ad Homer. C A/^^ S3 Urjn,,r/r^ a) ay b(i a/j oaJY 7* ft 7i JVC a ai a\ aXX av av a xo avro avTov yeXX 7 tv JiV YlVZTai re re™ it & i V 20CL %A <$ia * ^ ^ ^ (fir ItU OM IKIV M £Ttf >7 V 7< ala ^T^ XS(pa)\ato> ri To jy/ff^ /VW opposite page J. : ^ mm&rumj 5 <&*/ TT UAJ o Za Zcu 3 r] r ^ ) a T 6 era crav 14 Tov tov TovS Tovlo Vox Tpo Ttu TbbV V VI V V v rcb v 5 vcrx jta, XL to place, opposite page 1. JLhere are twenty-four letters in Greek a A a I Alpha B |3 C Beta b rvf Gamma g zf 3 Delta d E 6 s Epsilon e Z ? £ Zeta z H 7} - Eta e 6 6 $ Theta th I i Iota i K h Kappa k A \ Lambda 1 M ft, Mu m N v Nu a § xi O o - Omicron II 7T *r Pi p P ^ $ Rho r X C.

. Six improper : a, ? n tp, tju, vi, o>u. 4 k M ■ * The letters, s, o, o, and co were called £/, ou, v and w, without the adjective, during many centuries after the Christian era. In e psilon, o micron, u psilon, i is long. But the names of these letters have, since the adoption of the distinctive adjectives, been pronounced in this country as single words with the English accent, tpsilon, omicron, upsilon. Some persons have lately resumed the former pronunciation. On this principle, omega must be called o mega. The addition of psilon to v appears unnecessary, as that vowel is not, like s and o, distinguished from a corresponding letter. a Anciently e was used for y, and o for w or ov : thus, K0PE2 for Ko^, ©EON for Szwv, and HEPOAO for *H;w?o& The long mark was then placed over s and o, thus i, o, for ij, w. 3 They are called doubtful, because they are long in some sylla- bles and short in others. 4 In the formation of the proper diphthongs, * and v are placed after a, s, or a. Hence t and v are called Subjunctive, and the rest Prepositive. In the formation of the improper diphthongs, t and u are placed after the same vowels made long, U, tj, or w. The /, then become s ilent, is subscribed, or placed under the former vowel. For the same reason vt is sometimes written y. The silent * was anciently either omitted, or added to the former vowel, as appears from Inscriptions and ancient MSS. thus, APAN or APAIN for fyav. It is still sometimes joined to capital letters, thus A*. Of the seventeen Consonants, nine are mutes, divided into, Three soft, tt, k, t ; Three middle, 0, y, 8 ; Three aspirate, ; *S, 7$, %S, form |"; t£, oV, $c 3 form £. And four are liquids: X, jx, v, ^>. 5 Perhaps in strictness ecu and vi should be considered sometimes as proper, sometimes as improper, diphthongs, according to the quantity of the former vowel. When two vowels, which generally coalesce into a diphthong, retain their separate sounds, two dots are placed over the latter vowel, and form a diasresis, as a.virvo$. -- 1 When two mutes come together, they must be both either soft, middle, or aspirate: thus, rkrviiroii, irvpfyv, not retviptai, * Called Sigma in the Ionic, San in the Doric, dialect. 3 r before y, h, £, p£, is pronounced like v ; thus ayyz'Ai; is pronounced avyshos, like n in angle. f 7 before y, x, £, % ; N is changed into < \j* before /3, /x, tf, dyafe. Two words are sometimes joined in one by Crasis ; as, Koiyu for tlcl) syu>, Kara, for kol) slra, d'vvg for o dv^, eyyfa for syta olfa, &c. " The circumflex was first marked *, then ", lastly ~. 2 Words accented on the last syllable are called oxytons or acutitons; words not accented on the last syllable are called bary- tons or gravitoiis. PARTS OF SPEECH. There are eight species of words, called Parts of Speech : Article, Noun, Adjective, Pronoun, Verb, Adverb, Preposition, Conjunction. 1 The four first are declined with Gender, Number, and Case. There are three genders : Masculine, Feminine 9 and Neuter. There are three numbers : The Singular speaks of one. The Dual, 2 " of two, or a pair. The Plural, of more than two. There are five cases : Nominative, Genitive, Dative, Accusative, Vocative. 1 The Nominative and Vocative are frequently the same in the singular, always in the dual and plural. The Dative has always ;, either final, or irj. a diph- thong in the last syllable. * The Interjections are included by the Greeks in the Adverbs. * The dual, which adds precision to the Greek language, is not used in the /Eolic dialect, or in Latin. It is not found in the New Testament, in the Septuagint, or in the Fathers. Jn the corruption of the language by the modern Greeks, it was omitted. Thus it was used in that copious language, the Arabic, and does not exist in the Persian. 3 An Ablative was admitted by ancient grammarians ; but as it is always the same as the Dative, it is generally omitted. The Genitive plural always ends in cov. The Dual has only two terminations, one for the Nominative, Accusative, and Vocative 5 the other for the Genitive and Dative. Neuters have the Nominative, Accusative, and Voca- tive alike ; and in the plural those cases end in a. In the dual they are like the masculine. ARTICLE. •0, i, to, The. 1 Singular. Dual. , Plural. M. F. N. M. F. N. N. 6, r), to, M. F. N. N T . oi, al, Ta t G. tou, T^g, tov, N. A. T'JQ, TX, Tc/J, G. T&V, D. TOO, Ttj, T-Jj, G. D. TOiVj Tcciv, toIv. D. T0~$, Talc, ToTr, A. TQV, Tr)V> TO. A. TO'JC, TUC, TSL, NOUN. Declensions of Nouns are three, answering to the three first Declensions in Latin. The Jir*st ends in a, 75 feminine, and in ag and yg masculine. The second ends in og generally masculine and some- times feminine, and ov neuter. The third ends in a, /, u neuter ; a> feminine ; v, £, p, g, -ty of all genders, and increases in the Genitive. 1 The article usually answers to the definite article the In English. When no article is expressed in Greek, the English article indefinite a is signified. Thus, avSowirog means a man, or man in general ; and uvSgwiroc, the man. This article, which does not exist in Latin, has been found of great utility in modern languages. Singular. H.uYyVfo5 G. ©wpj Boppds, G. Bo#5 ; Sarava^, 9 In or, and the rest like Movcra, : thus, N. ra/Ja£, G. ra- Nouns in vj£ make the Genitive in ou, the Accusative in 75 V, and the Vocative in 75, and the rest like Movcra : thus, N. TeXtovys, G. tsKmvou, A. rs'kwvriVy V. teXwvv}. 1 SECOND DECLENSION. / Singular. Dual. Plural. N. Xoy-o$, N. Xoy-oi, G. Xoy-ov, N.A.V. AoV-w, G. Xoy-uiVy D. Xoy-co, D. Xoy-oig, A. koy-ov, G. D. Xoy-oiv. A. Xoy-ovc 9 V. Xoy-s. V. Xoy-oi. x G. Sarava ; TtoLitiiccc, G. itantita.. These Genitives in a were the Doric form. * It seems to be a general principle to shorten the termination of the N. to form the V. Hence the following make the V. in a : nouns in fys ; compounds in itr^, as yjovwitr^ ; nouns in 7}$ derived from psrgu), itw\w> r^lfiov, as, ysofjLst^yjs ; or denoting nations, as, Usgo-ys, Per- sian, V. ITg^cra, but Us^trrjs, the name of a man, Hs§ fe» 7^$, $$> &c. On this principle, the terminations were e\ir\$$ t o; ; ifu§g, o$ ; z\s$3Lvr$, oc, &c. The effect of time on language is to abbreviate words, particularly those which occur most frequently ; hence fa&vf$ has been abbreviated into laa;, itgdypaTs into it^ay^a, itl§s into nous, &c. Sometimes one, sometimes the other, of the two final conso- nants is dropt; thus, pagTvos is softened sometimes into ^a^rup and sometimes into pa.gru$, cek7TT0VG-i. Words ending in g after a diphthong add i to the Nominative Singular ; as, Tvwsig, tottsTo-*. 1 Nouns syncopated make the Dative in ouri ; as, 7ra,T7jf>, ira/repi, 7rotrp>) } irarpao'iJ' CONTRACTION. Two syllables, in which two or more vowels meet together, are often contracted into one. A contraction of two syllables into one, without a change of letters, is called Synarresis ; as, tsi%$\\ tsi%£i> If there is a change of vowels, it is called Crasis ; as, T£i%sog, T£i%ovg. Contraction takes place in every Declension. x Except JtreVf, y.i'sori ; tyopeus, tyo^'scrr, vlsv$, vlscri ; ou^, wVi ; irov$, m never follows v. Tacn^ retains yoccrrrj^cri. Xe)§ makes X £ Z? 1 from the poetic %eci. These rules apply to adjectives and participles as well as to substantives. 13 In the First Declension, sa is contracted into yj ; as ysa, yr i9 G. ykag, yvjg, &c. Pea, and all other terminations, drop the former vowel ; as, Ipsa, epd, G. epsag, spdg, &c as-Xoij, a7rX^, G. a7rAo7jC, a.7r?^rjC, &C. In the Second Declension, if the latter vowel is short, the contraction is in 00 ; if long, the former vowel is dropt ; as, voog, vo*jg, G. i)oou, vov, &C. 1 Contracts of the Third Declension. 1. Nouns in vg, uog, have only two contractions, usg and nag into ug ; thus fiorpug, PI. N. V. fdorpueg, fiorpvg, A. fiorp'jagj (dorpug. 2 ' 2. Nouns in ig and 1 have ///red contractions, ti into i, i?c and iag into *c ; thus, N. >k, PL N. V. o$igf, oi^ A. o^-iag, fyig. Neuters in * make the plural in ia, i. z 1 The compounds of voo$ and poos are not contracted in the neuter plural, or in the Genitive: thus we say, sCvocx,, svvowv, not suva, zvvcov. Y<£o$ is contracted thus : Sing. N. : thus, N. «<§W£, G. OiMOOCy cdtouc, D. uMoiy ailoi) A. cdlociy aiHoo. 4. Nouns in svg, uc, and u, making in the Genitive soc, have yowr contractions, si' into s7, se into ij, ssg and sa£ into slg ; thus, N. fiutY)p-Y)S, G. TgiYjp-svs, ovg, J). TglYjps'i, Sly A. T^p-My fly V. Tpiyp-sg. Dual. N.A.V. TpiY)g-e6yY h G.jy. TplYip~ej£>, and yao-rr^ ; but they are not syncopated in the A. Sing, in the G. or A. PI. to avoid the .similarity with irar^a, pjrgia, and yajrr^a, of the first Declension. * Masculine in the Sing, and neuter in the PI. 8lvy-o$> -a; po^X-os, -a.; vcot-o;, -cc; vrctfy-os, -a;ra^ap-o^, -a; T^dyrriX-og, -a. This neuter comes from the obsolete Sing, in ov. Masculine in the Sing, masculine and neuter in the Plural, htr^-oc, -o) and a ; xvx\-o$,-oi and a ; \v%y-o$,-oi and oc. Feminine in the Singular, feminine and neuter in the Plural, •xsXevQ-osy-oi and a. 1 Some have different terminations in the Nom. as, MwinJV and Mcv£U, Sogots ; yovv and yova, &c. So we find jarjAa and /x^Aara, it^o^droig and tffo/3acn, ys^ovroi; and ysgoviri, &c. Thus in Latin thematis for tkematibus, &c> Some admit different inflections from the same Nominative, as *iy§-if» ~ l °S and -*Jo^ ; Qep-t$, -ifog and -faros ; 0aA-->js, -oy and -tjt'oj ; w A§'r t $ 9 -oy, -eo$ and -Tjrof ; the compounds of tfoyV make in the Gen. Troy and irooos. &c. Some nouns are declined from obsolete Nominatives ; as, yyvij, yvvouxos, from yvvaig ; yaAa, ydXa.xrog y from yaAa£ ; ojffa^, Tjffa- ros; (pgsccg, AfoV, Af)", Ala. a Aptots : £cJ for SvS{ia ; xaca ; the names of the letters; foreign, names not susceptible of Greek inflexions, as, 'A/S^oca/xj and all numbers from itevre to iMrw, both inclusive. 17 Some have one case only. 1 Some have but two cases.* Others have only three cases. 5 Some have no Singular, 4 others no Plural. 5 * Monoptots: in the Sing. N. &w$. V. w tiv. In the PI. N. -xaraxAwfle^. G. idow. V.w itQitoi. Diptots : aptpcv, dfx0oHv ; fQolss," pflo/of ; Afc, A7v. 3 Triptots : G. aAAiJAwy, D. dX\rj\-oif, ou$, ot$, A. aAAijA-oy;, «;, a. These have only the N. A. and V. jS^sra^, fc'jxa$-, Astfaf, 4 The names of festivals ; some names of cities, &c. 5 *AA;, yij, sXcuov, irvg, and many others known by the sense- Patronymics. From the Father's name the Greeks form an appellative for the descendants, generally according to the following rules : 1 . To form the names of Men, the termination of the G. of the Father's name is" changed into i$r t $, as Kjovoy, K§9vi8r t s, 'Argk; 'Argei8ri$. From names of the First Declension, or which have 1 in the penult, the change is into afys, asBogsov Bo§ed8r i c/K?dou , H?udS^- If the penult, is long, the change is into i&Sijc, as, TsXa^wvos 'TeXcL^uuvid^g. The Ionic form is wy, the iEolic Biog, as, KfowW, Kgovlhof. 2. To form the names of Women, the termination is changed into a;, 1$, ivij and iwi}, as Ugidpov Ilf tap.);, 'Axfjowu *Axf<«wy5j. A vowel is sometimes added, as, EtyAsiflifyf for IT7jAe/fy;; qi dropt, as, Nijfiiyij for liityf siyrj. c 18 ADJECTIVE. Adjectives are declined like substantives* Declensions of adjectives are three : The first of three terminations ; The second of two ; The third of one. 1 . Adjectives of three terminations end in M. F. N.. Hi «> ov7 *** *l> ov; "$> CHTCty av; «s. aw*, av; sis, SU7U, ev; "h strtrct., if w> SIVCt, ev; ov$, Qva-a, ov; ou$, ov ZiOL, t>; <>S> v$; *h viet, 0$. 1 Eo$, sa 9 sov is contracted into ov$, a, ovv, as, dgyvg-sos, sot, sov into dgyv§~ov$, oi, ovv. * Oo$, or}, oov, and so;, sm, sov, are contracted into ov$, yj, ovv ; as, dtX-oo;, 6y, oov into difK-ovs, ij, ovv; %f>u'cr-£C>/, ey, sov into Xfuc-ou;, ij, ovv. 3 Ms\iro-si$, £o- , make the Fern, in ij. The Attics use the termination 05 for masc. and fern, particularly in compounds and derivatives. Thus quis is used by Plautus for masc. and fern. * Toiovrov, T0 uvcdv, D. juiX-acrf, otivMg, ct}?, evToj, D. %ag»-em, eV €VOf, en. gOUCT«, bOV, G. SoVTOS, $QV Soucra, lovre, G. D. loVTQW, doVG-CtlV, SOVTGIV. Plural. N. 8ovT£j, 5o0j, ouvn, A. 7rXax-ouvT«, ou7r-oycr<5 ov o$, G. T5TV$-GT0S, viae, otos, D. T£7V$-QTl, VIOL, OTt, A. TSTVV, OTCOV, D. tstu<£-oVj, u<«i£, oV<, A. TSTV *v ; jf* ev; nf. e$i *$> *; ovg, ow; VS, »; cov, ov; cog, op; <»$> (OV. Singular. Dual. Plural. N. evdo%~og, ov, N. evSof-o/, a. G. evSog-ov, N.A.V. £v8oj*co, G. svUij-iov, D, evfo'Z-io, D. 6v8o£-o<£, A. ev$o£-ov, G.D. IvcVf )iV. A. evM%-ovg, «, V. evfog-e, oy. V. ev&ojj-o», *. Sing. N. delv-CLf, av, G. dsivavrof, D. deivavfi, A. aelv-ixvra, av, V. deivctv. Sing. N. app-^v, sv, G. dppevo$ f D. dopsvi, A. aipp-sva,, sv, V. appev. 24 Dual. N.A.V. aslvavrt, G.p, aejyayrojy. Dual. N. A. V. appevsi G. D. dposvoiv. Plur. N. deiv-ocvtsst olvtoc, G. dsivdvYwv, D. delvao'it A. dsiv-avras, avra* V. d&w-CLrteSi oivtOL-, Plur. N. app-sv£$ f sva, G. dppsvtvv, D. appetrt. A. app-evoc;, svcc, V. ccpo-evsc, sva. Sing. N. d\ifi-^s, h, G. dXyft-eoe, ovc, D. dXrfi-i'if si, A. d\rfi-ea,y rj, eg, V. dkrfie;. Dual. N.A.V. aA^-c's,^, G.D. dXrfi-ioiV) oiv. Plur. N. dXrfi-sec, ei$ 9 ia t i- s G. dXvfi-ewv, «5V, D. aAvjflgVf, A. dXrfi4a,g t EigySa,y r h V. dXrjQ-sse, e7$, set, f. Sing. N. su%ao-;;, <> G. svxdftros, D. ev^d^itt, A. ey^a^-jra, jy, /, Sing. N. tfwr-ouj, oyy, G. Siiro$o$ t D." $Mr"o&, A. Swr-o$a, oyy, ouv, V, &V«oy;,oy, oyy. Dual. Plur. N. evy^-irssy ira, N.A.V. svydpfe, G. sv%oi§trwv 9 G. D. gy^afiroiy. D. stydquri, A. Evxdg'iras, ttoc x V. EV%dg-lfBSt WO" Dual. Plur. . N. ok-ofc$ t o£a, N.A.V. &»&, G. &7ro£«/v, G.D. hitofow. D. 5mto«, A. $lir-o8ct$, G&Z, V. S'nr-oSe?, o$ac. 25 Sing. Dual. Plur. N. ccSaxg-vs, v, N. a^axf-ug^,uf,ya, G. dSdxgvos, N.A.V. dSdxgvs, G. dfiaxgvojy, D. dSdxgvi, G. D. dSxKgvoiv. D. d8dxgv D. psyakyTOgl, A. pzyaX-rp-o^a, o§, V. ftsydXyrog. Dual. N.A.V. pzya\yro§s, G. D. psyahvpogoiv. Plur. N. psyaXyr-ogss, of a, G. jocsyaA^ropwy, D. [AEy & c » Irregular Adjectives. Msyag and no^bs have only the Nom. Ace. and Voc. Masc. and Neuter of the * Singular, and borrow the other cases from peyak-og, r), ov, and ttoXA-o£, y, 6v: thus, Sing. N. ME'rAS, psydXy, ME'rA, G. y,sydX-ov, ys, ou, D. psydX-cy,, r\ t cv, A. ME'rAN, psydXyv, META, V. META, pzydXr}, ME'TA. Dual. N. A. V. (x-eydx-w, a, a;, G.D. [LsydX-oiv, cuv, oiv. Plur. N. psyaX-oi, a/, a, G. psydXcvv, D. peydX-Qi;, «<£> Ots, A. psydX-ovs, asy cc, V. psydX-oi, a;, a. Sing. N. nOA'TS, tfoAAr), nOA'T,* G. tfoAA-ov, yj$, w, D. TtoXX-cy, ^, cT, A. nOA'TN, tfoAA^, ITOaX v. noA v r, ttoaa^, noAr. DupI. N.A.V. ttoAA-w, a, cy, G. D. TtoXX-tTtVy ouv> o7v. Plur. N. ttoAA-o;, a?, a, G. itoXXwv, D. TtoXX-oi$, eels, 0%, A. itoX\-ou$, d$, a, V. tfoAA-01, a), a. 3 1 The Neuter is expressed by another adjective ; thus for the neuter of aifrylaiVj aiar^KTTog. *xH°s> &J(9lu)V f S^KTTOg. otuhog. xotWtoov, %OLKk\iu$, rfivg, ntayug, ra^vg, Mg, &c. make XcoVtrroj, 6 Xcawv, 3 A«5y » worse, is formed y^i^ors^og : thus in Shakespeare, worser. From fisicov, /m, is formed psiorsgog, thus lesser, &c. From eXa^^r^ is formed sXoc^KrTore^og ; from KuSurrog, xv$l§, KrfOLto;. itrrarog. urrog. Thus in Latin, oculissimus. From a pronoun : autbg, ipse, avrorocrog, ipsissimus. From adverbs: aw, aw-tsgog, farog. XOCtCU, KOLTCU'tE^Og, tarog* cupug, dtpdg-i'sgog. TtOppUJ, TToppw-TSgog, rafog. £ £ » t rocrog. TtQVtH, Tt$vjiod-Te%og t Tortog, iyyvg, \ syyv-rs§og, fctfog. otfliru}, Qifto-w-rs^og, rocrog. Leyy-iwv, l?T0g. v$t, vypi9*rog. so Numerals. One. Sing. Two. Dual. Two, Plur. N. e7$, \M&> eV, G. evo$, p&, ivos, N. A. 860 z or Suw, G. SvJjVf D. ivi, pia, sv), G. D. 8uoiy or Sveiy.' 3 D. W. A. evoc, puxv, sv. From prepositions : rtgo, rfgo-fsgos, Taros, by syncope and contraction aguh'os. Meg, vrfeg-rsgosy raro$, by syncope vtfaros. The relation existing between certain adjectives of frequent occur- rence in all the European dialects, in a similar irregularity of compa- rison, is remarkable. The following list, confined to one adjective, will prove that there is a strong analogy among them :' Latin, bonus, melior, optimus. Welsh, da, gwell, gorau. Armoric, mat, guel. Irish, maith, niossfearr. Russian, xorote, lytchio. German, gut, besscr, bestc. English, good, better, best. *The two last seem of the same origin as dyabos shortened into y yaA\ P'shrsgos, jSeXrioYoj. Similar to this comparative is the Per- sian behter. The French, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish are not mentioned, as they are derived from the Latin. 1 Thus ovh)$, ovU[l\ol, ovSev , and pj#£<;, pjfala, imjSsv, Aristotle uses ovQeig ; Homer, ovri$. From st$ is formed srsg-os, a, ov ; and from qv8s)s 9 and pySeis, ovUre§o$ and y,7}8sT£§o§. 2 Auo is always used by the Attics. It is sometimes an aptot. 3 Avslv is used as the feminine. From §vo is formed fovfegos and four at os,- 31 Three. Plur. N. *§sis, *gi&9 G. fgiwy, D. f^ur), A. *ca, A, /, 1 0. J'y&=Ka, AI, td, 11. Sw&xa, All, //3', 12. fgieataiSexa, AIII, *y', 13. f£(rtcd$£xa., AIIII, j£', 14. TtEVfExodfoKa,, All, if, 15. £>cxai££>ca, All I, */, 16. efffOMuSsKa, All II, /£, 17. 0Kra>>£ai<$£>ca, All III, irj, 18. sYvsaxaiSexa, All IIII, #', 19. *7K0ca, 21. TpditQvra, AAA, A', 30. Tsovapaxoyfa, AAAA, p, 40. Ttsvryxoyra, W, v, 50. s^Kovra, J5[A, ?> 60. EfidopYjKovTa, ^[AA, 0, 70. ©yfoijxoyra, !a[AAA, 7/, 80. evvevyxovra, JSfAAAA, ^, 90. sxarov, H, f', 100. fooatotri-oi, at, a, HH, a-', 200. rpaoioinoi, HHH, r, 300. tstrcra^aKwiot, HHHH, u, 400. 7rsyra>co(r{o/, ]§[, /o/, M, ; <, 10,000. Sio-pvftot, MM, y H, 20,000. TtEvraxHriLVgioi, JJ, y, 50,000. &xa>u^u'p/,]5j[]ajj[, ^, 100,000. To express the 9 units, the 9 tens, and the 9 hundreds, the Greeks used the letters of the alphabet. But as there are only 24, they usedr, called sTficrrj^oy, for 6 ; $, called xoWa, for 90 ; and Q, called ray itl, a it covered with an inverted fj*, for 900. 32 A mark is placed over the letters to express the numbers. Placed under them, it expresses thousands ; thus e is 5, s is 5000. The figures of the present year are jxwrf', 1814. In the Capitals, I, 1, is the niark of Unit ; H, 100, is the initial of Hsxarov ; IT, .5, is the initial of Usvts ; X, 1000, XiXm ; A, 10, AUa, ; M, 10,000,* Mv§iot. Each of these may be repeated four times : thus IIII, 4 ; AAA, 30 : MM, 20,000, &c. II inclosing a numerical letter multiplies it by 5 ; thus pi, 50, &c. From 10 to 20, the large numbers may be placed first or last, Ssxot 8vo or 5w#£Ka, 12. From 20, the larger number is placed first, sixoo-i 8vo, 22. From 30, the conjunction is inserted, t^mytv. kcc) Svo, 32, &c. Of the Ordinal numbers, all under 20, except second, seventh, and eighth, end in ro$. From thence upwards all end in oo*ro£. Thus, tgwros, hvrsgog, fgi?o$, emoo'Toc;, ^iXiocrTor, &c. The Greeks have used the letters of the alphabet in their natural order, to express a consecutive series, or marks of division. Thus the 24 books of the Iliad and Odyssey are marked by the 24 let* ters, as the stanzas of the ll^th Psalm are by the Hebrew letters,. 33 Pronoun. Pronouns are divided into 1. Personal. iyw, I; cru, thou; «5, of him. 2. Possessive. ¥~h> i ov, my; G-o$f j, o, that ; outo£, auT>j, touto, this. 5. Reciprocal- spuvTou, of myself ; (reauTow, of thyself ; savTQv, of himself. 6. Indefinite, rfe t», any; hlvot, some one. Sing. ■N. eyco, G. i/xou or fioVf D. Ifxo) or /ao», A. l/*g or pe. Dual. Plur *">% N. tyutsf N. A. vcB'i, v», G. fyjtAWV, G. D. v»iv, vaJv. D. rifi.lv, A. fyjX«?. 34 Sing, N. To^ and sxsjVos are declined like o$, $, ©. OuTog, auTY), touto is declined, and prefixes r, like the article, thus : 35 Sin! N. qiitos, UUTYj, TOVTO, G. TOUT OU, TCVJTY\C f TOUTQU, D. TOUTW, TXVTYj, TOUTGp, A. TOVTOV, TUVTY}Vj TO WTO. N. A. TOVTUi, G. D. TOVTQIV, Dual. TUVTCllV, Plur. N. oOto/, CiVTOll, TOLUTCtj G. TOUTCOV, D. TOUTO/£, TUUT/XIS, TOVTOig, A. TOUTOW^, TOtUTCtS, TCMTCL. From the Personal Pronouns and aurog are com- pounded " SfiOLVT-QV, (TStXVT-OVj kctVT-OU. W, GV } v> y, v> OVj >JV, 0. Of these the last alone has a plural : G. kuvT'WV, D. oiq, oug, olg y A. ov$, oi$, a. 2 . * Homer never uses these reciprocals, but sixe ctvrov, &c. 2 The Middle Voice is so called because it has a middle significa- tion between the x\ctive and the Passive. It implies neither action nor passion alone, but an action reflected on the agent himself. It signifies what we do, I. to ourselves ; II. for ourselves. I. Thus (poBsotf Active signifies I frighten another person ; r\ or fy, D. rjTQVj V t rjTYiVy P. fyev, Future. 3 Tjfrav." S. 'icTOfLOLl, 3f e0 > eVera/, D. ko-opsSov, sosjTs, eirpoiv or shih S. Future. l(ro/jtt>)v, e D. ?TOV, )JTOV, P. cw/x-sv, ?T^ co, distin- guished by the termination of the First Future ; The First Conjugation in ^w, as tutto), rvtyo. The Second in £o,, as Xsyco, xl|a>. The Third in , as Tiro, tIg-cd. The Fourth in a liquid before di, as -i/aT^kco, -tyoLkao. 1 ACTIVE VOICE. 1. The Principal Parts. Pres. 7U7TTW. 1st Fut. tu\[/co, Perf. tstu^«. 2d Aor. ETV7T0V. 1 For those learners, who may have been accustomed, or wjjo may give the preference, to the distinction of Conjugations by the characteristic, or the letter preceding cy, the principles of that system are here added. For the sake of analogy and simplification, it is necessary to observe that the Mute consonants are divided, with reference to the organs of speech, into Labials, pronounced by the lips, it, jS,

, D. TVTTTSTbV, rVTrrsrcov, P. TV7TT6TS, First Aorist, strike. TVirTSTCtiCCtV S. TU\[/0V, Tvty&TUJ, D. TutytXTOV, TU^aTCOV, P. TU\|/aT£, TvtyaTootrotv. Perfect, have struck. S. reruns, TSTV Second Aorist, strike? s. TU7TS, ryTrera;, D. TyT£T0V, TU7tItOJV, P. TU7T6T5, TU7rsrcocrav. 1 It may appear strange that the Imperative should refer to a past, and not to a future time. To solve a part of the difficulty, some have called the First and Second Aorists the First and Second Futures. By the Present the Future also is signified. And the Perfect enjoins a thing to be done prior to a specified time ; as, I order you to have done this before I return. a This tense appears to be the root of the verb; thus twits of rviteou or fuitrw, Aa/Ss of Aa/>i/3avw, ties of r^^at, &c. The first use of language is to express a want, hence the Imperative was naturally the first object of Speech. 45 OPTATIVE MOOD. Present, I may be striking, S. TUTTTOtai, TV7TT01C) TU7TT0J, D. TV7TT01TQV, TUWTOITIJV, P. TV7TT0lfJLeV 9 TVTTTOITS, TVTTTOISV, First Future, I may hereafter strike. D. TV^OITOV, TwI/oItY\V, P. tu\(/oi|X6V, tw'4/oit«, Tuv[/oisy. First Aorist, J waj/ have struck, S. TU\J/a/jXj, Tvtyats, tu^cii, P. TurJ/aijUrSV, tuiI/uits, rvtyaisv. 1 Perfect, J may Aflve 6eew striking. S. TSTVQOlfU, TSTVQOig, TSTVfQl, D. TSTU^OiTOV, TSTVQOITYIV, P. TSTVtpQljASV, TSTVfyorfSj TSTU^O^V. Second Aorist, J way ^cwe struck. S. TU7T0J/JU, TV7r0l$ } TU7T01, D. twchtov, tvttoItyjv, P. TU7T0ipZV, TUTTOITS, TVVOM. * The iEolic form of this Tense is frequently used, particularly by the Attics : S. fvtysia, • 7"JvJ/£, tvwtjjj, twt^, D» TU7TOJT0V, TtWlJTOV, P. ruTrrca^Vy TUTrDjre, tutttoxt/. First Aorist, J should have struck. S. TU\[/0>, TttylJJ, TthJflT, D. TU\I/>}T0V, TV^V)T0V, P. Tutyoopev, tu^ts, TvtyctiJ£, TZJVQlQ, D. T£TU$>JT0J/, TgT^yjTOl/, P. TSTV^CJOpSV, T£TUJTS, TtmUiVi. 1 In the English expression of the Tenses, much precision is not to be expected. Their use and signification depend on the Conjunc- tions and Particles, to which they are joined. The Optative, for instance, is seldom used in the Potential sense without aV. 47 INFINITIVE MOOD. Present, tutttsiv, to strike. First Future, rufaiv, to be going to strike. First Aorist, t TV7T0VV, G. TVTTQVVTQS, TyTTOVC"^, TV7TQVVTQC. 48 Augment.* Of the Nine Tenses, Three receive an Augment, continued through all the Moods: the Perfect, Pluperfect, and Paulo-post- Future. Three receive an Augment in the Indicative only : the Imperfect, and the Two Aorists. 1 Three receive no Augment: the Present, and the Two Futures. There are Two Augments; the Syllabic, when the verb begins with a Consonant ; the Temporal, when the Verb begins with a Vowel. 5 1 The Augment serves to prevent ambiguity; else the Imperfect rinfre would be confounded with the Imperative, and the First Aorist rv^ac; with the Participle. It is probable that no Augment existed in the origin of the language. In the ancient Ionic Dialect none is found. E was first prt fixed to all augmented Tenses for tic Temporal as well as for the Syllabic Augment: thus: suyov, ssXifityv, soira£ov. Ea was contracted in 77, ss into 77, and sometimes si, and so into cy. Hence sayov became yjyov, ssXitiZflv yXTtiXflv, and sottol^ov wTtalpv ; honce ss^ov became si^ov. The Auics sometimes pn-serve s, forming suyoy from dyaj to break, probably on account of the insertion of the Digamma. a "Eifw continues the Augment of the Aorists, sltfcc and sltfov. 3 The Syllabic is so called because it adds a syllable to the word ; the Temporal, because it increases the time or quantity of the syllable. 49 The Syllabic Augment is s prefixed to the Imperfect and the Aorists, as stiwttov, erwtya, s'twov. 1 When it is Continued, it repeats the initial Consonant of the Verb, as rerixpa. 4 If the Verb begins with a Vowel, the Temporal Augment is Continued. If the initial Consonant is an Aspirate, it must be changed into the corresponding Soft, as $uo>, rsQunaJ The Temporal Augment changes a into rj, as uyw, yyov. s into yj, as lA7n?«;, >}A7n£ov. * w into f, as i'xocvco, fxcuvov. 1 It has been conjectured that the Syllabic Augment is formed from the Imperfect ty. Perhaps the Ionic form so, is a more pro- bable origin. In the Shanscrit language the same Syllabic Augment, e, is prefixed in the formation of the Past Tense. Some Celtic Tenses are also formed by prefixes. a The repetition pf the initial consonant in the 1 continued Augment is called Reduplication. It sometimes takes place in Latin : do, dedi; pun go, pupugi ; tango, tetigi, &c. When the Verb begins with a double letter, with tx%o;, as aTpw, jf^ov. ao into yv f as ocu^uvco, r\v%ctvov. su into >ju, as etr^ojxaj, »)iJ;5£0|a)jv. o< into w, as olxl^oo, cpxifyv* 1 e is in some verbs changed into et, as *x®> el^ov.* so is changed into set), as kopTa(co y ewfiTotfyv. Verbs compounded with Prepositions take the Aug- ment between the Preposition and the Verb, as Trptxr- 1 In some Latin Verbs a Temporal Augment takes place, as tf go, egi ; J? wo, erai ; fMio,fodi, &c. 1 The following change s into £/ : idcv, sXlara-cv, ErfOfAM, sfuw, *£«;, ?A>ta;, g'fya^a*, foDJxw, zQi'(t(J, sKkVU), ZgtfCOf *%">> sXco, Birov, igtfvZuj, SCV. 3 Some Compound Verbs, which retain the same meaning as those, from which they are compounded, are considered as Simples, and take the Augment in the beginning. Some take an Augment both before and after the Preposition, as avcgQoLVy yvujgSaov i ivo^Xsw, -^voo^Xsov ; &c. Many have no Augment: those beginning with vowels or diph- thongs not mentioned in the rule ; many beginning in o<, particularly those compounded with olx&s, q1vo$ and qIvwq$ ; also aw, dfoo, drfiitypai) &Y)U from a.7ro and aipio). 'Ex in composition becomes 1% before a Vowel, as sxQspw, e£{$£pov. 'Ev and , as tuti-toi,- ru-tyco ; in the Second into gco, as hi-yco, Xs§a> ; in the Third into Va), as rlco, rlo-co ; * in the Fourth, by circumflexing the last syllable and shortening the penultima, as -tyaXka), ^aKw. 1 The First Future is really formed by the insertion of change a and s into >j, and o into to, as ripato, ri^Tjcrto ; (pfaeco, ; &7j?woa), Four Verbs change the Soft of the first syllable into an Aspirate breathing : «%a), £%<#> rps^ci), Qpe^/oo : 1 The following are excepted : 1. Verbs in ouv, preceded by £ or i; Verbs in Aaa; and %a,vo pure ; with fotpduj, Sgdui, xXdcu, paw, vdoj, rfErdiu), eitdoo, (pxdui. 2. These in £'jo : dxsuj, df/,quew, dg'/Jov, £uj, Z,sou, xsou, vouicv, vzixsco, %ew, oXsoo, G-Togsco, rsKeu), rgsou ; and Verbs, which form others in vvuj, vv^A and exec. Some make £, ivoou, opoov, ovotv ; and Verbs, "which form others in vuou and a-y.ou. 1 The Present of these Verbs should begin with an Aspirate, thus tyw, Q§£ja, 54 The First Aorist is formed from the First Future, by prefixing the Aug- merit, and changing co into a, as rtyco, lVu\|/a. A doubtful vowel in the penultima of the First Aorist of the Fourth Conjugation is made long, a is changed into r t , and s into s/, as xpfvoo, 'ixpim ; ^/aXco, %-itfk* ; [XSVCU, £[ASWOL. 1 Elwu and yveyxa. are formed from the Present ; ^xa, eQyxa, ebaxxoL from the Perfect. The following drop the , AeAe^a ; in the 3rd, into xa, as riant), rsrixa ; in the 4th, a> into x, styaXxaJ' Dissyllables in Xo>, va), pco change the s of the First Future into a, as (ttsX«j>, ecrrakxoL. 1 If the penult, of the Pres. has a;, that of the 1st Aor. in the common Dialect has a, in the Attic, r t $ as cr^odvoi, , &*3ov;\ M }- into a, as '•* ) rpuyu, J and cro-fo of the Second Conjugation form the Second Aorist in yoi/ ; of the Third, in Sov ; as 7rpoLpa%w, (ppacrco, eQpotftoir. * This takes place in some words beginning with a Mute and a Liquid, as 7rXixw, sttXclkov ; xXetfrto, exXoctfov ; but /SAgVw and (pXeyw are regular. Tspvw makes irapov and srspQy. 4 Formed from /SAajSw, xato'/3«/> xf v/3w. 57 Verbs in am and em change am and em into JV Imper. Opt. Subj. Infin. TV7TT-0U -o/jU.l]V -wpoti -sJV -«; -YjVCtl -o/|XlJV -earQai o[asvo$ -fjt,fj,evog ■6psvo$ V ■opsvog ■sis -6fX,SV0$ 1 *H.xoov from cbtouco is poetical. Tt is originally the same as the 1st Fur. Tuirrcv made ruiticruj or fvirrw, i. e. rorj/w. The former in the Ionic dialect became rvifew, H 58 Numbers and Persons. INDICATIVE MOOD. Present, I am struck. S. TU7TT0fXUl, TUTTTYj^ TU7TTST#I, D. TV7TTQfJ*sQoV, TUTTTSCtQoV, TVKT£)V, ItUTTTOU, eTV7rT£T0, D. k-VKTopedov, eTUTrrecrdov, huTnivQty, P. 6Twrojxs0a, eTU7rTe/x.jo,«j, TeVurJ/opi, TerviTTcti, D. T£TUjW,/iCS0OV, TfiVufOoV, T£TV$QoV, P. T£TVfJt,p:Qoi f T£TU], TSTv'J'STaJ, D. T£TU\f/O]X£0Oy, TSTu4/=O-0OV, T£Tu'4/£O"0Oy, P. TSTV^OfJt.sQcC, T£TU\(/£(r6e, T£TU\|/0VTa*. First Aorist, J a?as struck. D. iTy$0>)TOV, £TU$0>jT))y, P. eTv<$>Qri[j,sv, Itv $0yjrs, It6ji7£cr0oy, tvQQyjvso-Qov, P. TV$QYijY)Too OPTATIVE MOOD. Present, I may be struck. S. TU^To/jXrjV, rUTTTOlOy TVTTTOITO, 1). TU7ZTo/|W,c0OV 3 TVirTOKlQoV, TUTTTOIG-QyIV, P. TV7TT0l[A=QoC 9 TUTTTOlvfe, TV7TT01VTO. Perfect, I may have been struck. D. TSTUiaju,sva> snjrov, ei^TVjv, P. TcTy/A/Asvoi elYipsv, snjTe, s1yijv, P. Tery\J/o//x,s0a, t£t6\J/oj<70=, tstv^oivto. First Aorist, / wzcj/ /i«i>e 6eew struck. S. Ty$0e/>JV, Ty<£$=i>Jf, TU^ds/l}, P. Ty$0s»>)|w](7o/juJ, D. TV7relY)T0V, TWnSlYjTYjV, P. TV7reiY\u,sv, TviFeiyre, Twrsnjcray. Second Future, 1 may be struck hereafter. S. Ty7T»J(ro//X>JV, TU7T^(T0/0, TyTT^OJTO, D. TU9njfl-o/jU,e0ov, TU9r^(roi(r6ov, Ty7r>)cro/cr0*)y, P. TV7FYli<7OJVT0. SUBJUNCTIVE MOOD. Present, J should be struck. S. TVffTCUpiXl, TVTTTYly TU7JT>JTa*, D. TV7TT(J.sQoV, Ty7mj0-$0V, TU7TT>JCrd0V, P. TVTTTWfieQot, TV7TTYl(n. Second Aorist, J should have been struck. S. Ty7r«J, Tunys, Ty7rrj, J). TVTTYITOVy TUWrJTOy, P. TyTrcojxey, Ty7njTg, Tynwcn. 63 INFINITIVE MOOD. Present, tvtttso-Qixi, to be struck. Perfect, rkru^ou, to have been struck. P. p. Future, T£TmJ/£j, Tu?nj into 0/JtOt/, aS TU7TTWD, TV7TT-0[Aai. The Imperfect is formed from the Imperfect Active, by changing v into ju,tjv, as £TU7rro-v, £Ti»7rro-|u.73j/. The Perfect is formed from the Perfect Active, by changing, in the 1st Conj. j-xa, 7reQriv. Three Verbs assume eTU7JT0/«jy 3 -ou -oi^v -copai TSTVTT-U ^ ST£TUTS»y J — g -Ol[U -co lru\|/5]y TU\{/-«I -otlfi.r\v -VOfLUt TU\|/-0jtt«i -o/ja.»jv cTU7roju,rji/ 7W-0U -o/pjy -(JOfLCH Twn-Qvpui -ojpjv Inf. -=cr0a; Part. ojxsyoj -Jyaj -COJ -«jv, P. rutycttpsQct, Ti>\[/a{<70e, TwJ/aivro. 1 The Perfect and Pluperfect have an Active, the other Tenses a Passive, termination. The only Tenses differing from the Active and Passive forms of verbs in (jo are the 1st Aorist Indicative, Imperative, and Optative^ and the 2d Future Indicative. 69 Formation of the Tenses, The Present and Imperfect are the same as those of the Passive. The Perfect is formed from the Second Aorist Active, by prefixing the Reduplication, and changing 01/ into a, as stuttov, TSTUTTOL. 1 In Dissyllables, if the Second Aorist has a in the penultima, from a Present in s or si, the Perfect Middle changes it into 0, as 7J-asxo>, iVXaxov, 7ri/rA0xa ; , i&ov, olfta.* 1 Hence those Verbs, which want the 2d Aor. Active, have no Perfect Middle. * ©aAAa>, l^ccXov makes rg'QijAa; and xAa&y, syckayov makes 3 Some retain also the diphthong of the Present; thus xsJflo; makes TtExevQa and kexvQcl ; Osiyu), iri, ew, and o ; Ti[j.aofJLsv, ri[xdi^,sv; Tifj-aouo-i, ti{jlco(ti: — else into a, as rivets, rlfjca : — ; is subscribed, as Ti[*aoifjLi, ti[a[j.i ; TifAaeig, TifJLag ; &C. Verbs in em contract ss into ?*, and so into ou, as

tXsi ; (priJo'Azv, c CO > 1— t Q t-, 1—4 H a < 8 ' 3 *» /i3r} '3'3'D AOJ. *s '«; »=» M* *i$ '«i ' A3fi ~« «S V i ^ '"^*\ t-i N 8 uj "*=> H o < *w-tff»«f rf a uu o W Ph 40* >5 >—i ,-~W N »8'JS«2 r/?.i ** Uj o n 8 o ifj ^ V* "^ w aT «» a iS o »3 J 3 J 3 3 3 3 *& -uj ^o Mi 73 10 *3<3 ! 3 J 3* 3* 3,i «a «^ J 3 teri \ h v- Vrt J-- j^ o g~ b b > 3 o o C £ o; v^ -g.e\^ >3-'S '5 *3 «3 l 3 V5 - HI ~o 5 3 3 r ^ x is *^ * 3 *3 o o e - s > •— ( < *-> 13 Q K 3-~3 3 § v 3 **3 Q W O > H O 'a «^ e 3 > h i— • Z 4 Pi o t-H o f MJ, M /10J, u* % < Pi < <3-'3'S to *8<^ ? 3 *-\ Ph *3 o o *S 3 3 ,*f J? 5^ ST 9? *? *8 -U) -o «S "tu o ° o o > 'a -u) ^o ? 3- ? 3 J 3 ^^5 ggg ,§ «D *=» *3 © o ,8 8 « .§ 3* 3* *§^: * 'a b b b Va Vj» % Va o 2 ^ =» '3-'3'3 Iv. O o o «"£&« UJ £; ^y »uu -o WD if '**» v£ 1 jfl « 3 3 **$ *ui -o *3- J 3 '3 »> •■. * 3 3 ' o !'<•< ^> <£ v£ -ST" R - £- *3 J 3 2 3 51 «< £ ' 3* >. >. X *3'3 J 3 3 3 3 K 74 CO W a o > w > CO CO 3 o o 2-D «3 »=> o © o 2 o o *■*$ -w ^o 4-g^ 9f° 3p) ' « ' W *g *« f 3 'g ~5S ~m *o T0§3'fl "3 AOQA '« '3 '5 a; Oh s aw© J 8 l GJ *=> AVAW^ 3 v 3 "3 QJ, *$ a ~uj ~© 1 '3 *=>'=> 1 &*(?.* 3 © o to/) £5 Q ^W ~© -£ © © Q -iu *•© rati aQ i^> jo jo ° o o ***§■*§ >© v<3"0 © o o 8 X © "a" ^w -o ' •■ t X L 1 1 ' I- <^<*a '«J *UJ *W3 '8 X»g3'// y iw o 30.0 "3 o o 'S "© "© a iu o '0-° *s aqq£ '8'3'2 W0i> 3 <=s o © o © 75 £ o -o 3gi ) J 3- ? S o Oh *§ 3 . Q V U) o "O V^3fl '3<3 '3 4 3 3~ S ^uj ^o 'a J ?^<3 v a *w ~o WQ3rl 3-~ "3 ~3 "5 Q UJ © i /tkp /.op *3-~© o iS^'3 > < H Ah O . Q UJ O /top 13 *3-'o 's Z ' Jf . * p o a -uj -o /top O -UJ *•© w >• 1— t E* t— » 5 I* UJ 5 b K u} o p &4 /lOQ3rl {3 A0Cj3fl 55 < ,«^ A ^^^\ CO /"^*^^*S "3-~© ~o v 3~3 v 3 O UJ o Q UJ O a 0^ 3- o o ~8 s s a -uj •*© " cJ3 J 3- 3 '© O »uj ~© tkrl 3-S 3 ~2 ^2 76 . Verbs in ML Verbs in pi are formed from Verbs of the Third Conjugation in am, sm, om, and vw 9 1. By prefixing the Reduplication with i ; x 2. By changing m into fxi ; z 3. By lengthening the penultima. Thus from a-rdm is formed forrjfu ; from Seco, Ti-,r\iki ; 3 from horn, 3/3ft)jtx/ ; from tizixvva), hslxvufxi. Verbs in fxi have only three tenses of that form : the Present, Imperfect, and Second Aorist. They take the other Tenses from Verbs in m ; thus Stim^i makes §m. Verbs in u;xi have neither Reduplication, 5 Second Aorist, 6 nor Optative or Subjunctive Moods. 7 1 If the Verb begins with a Vowel, with iff or err, I aspirate only is prefixed, as s u>, lyiA ; irrau), firry [M, &c. This is called the Improper Reduplication. The Reduplication takes place in the Pres. and Imperf. only. x The form in ( ai is Old Attic and Ionic ; hence xrfifri ; oviou, ovy^i ; ogdui, 0§i)fU ; QiXsou, pi/v^a* ; /Tt 77 ACTIVE VOICE. The Moods and Tenses. Ind Present Imper. 2dAor. Imper. Opt. Subj. Inf. -aSi -a/yjv -co -avai -STl -=/rjv -co -ZVCtl -0Q1 -oAjv -w -ovai -V$l -vvai Part. -*$ -vg the rest like the Present. <7T>]0< CrTOtlYjV o~tco (TT^Vai Sej flsnjv 5 60 QHvai c% 5o/>)V %U) Sovvai (TTOLS W. dovg The other Tenses are regularly formed from Verbs in , thus : 1 Fut. 1 Aor. Perf. Plup. -OijOU -siv -0/jOU -eiv -aifM -eiv -OlfJU .... -eiv -00 -Oil -co -Oil -co -Ctl -00 -OLl -00 -SVM -00 -even -00 -SVCtl -00 -SVOtl -oov -oov -oov -oov -a; -ag -ag -a.$ -00$ -oog -OiC -cog )=iy(siv 1 The 1st Aorist of htfiffU has an Active, and the 2d a neuter signification. So in fialvcv. % Some irregularities occur in those tenses of the Verbs in pt, 78 Numbers and Persons. Present. Sing. Dual. Plur. for-Yipi, Ytf, nfh tXTOV, CLTOV, ajxev, are, UGl* T/0-ijfw, m> Wh STOV, ZTQV, epsv, STS, 610"*, %i$-cop,i 9 oog, w vc, v> utgv, uryv, U[ASV, UTS, UVOLV. 3 which follow the analogy of Verbs in to. In the latter, the Perfect preserves the penultima of the 1st Future. But verbs in ju, derived from £to, change tj, the penultima of the 1st Future, into si for the Perfect, as Uw 3 Qrj, o"njo*co, eoYaxa. In this last a syncope often takes place ; thus Icrrcca : hence the Participle e]V, K, v YjTOV, rjTYjV, »-lJV, ns, n> STOV, STYIV, s$-oov } <*h w, 0T0V 9 QTTiV, Plur. spsv, sts, ej0l/ a-TYjTCOf (TT^TOV, (TnjTCOV, crrrji e, GT^raHrav, % flsTCO, 0eVoV, 0ero>i/, Uts, 0s'r«;o-s*Vj 8o& Soto;, S0V0V3 8otcov, loTS) $<>Ta>fl"av. 4 1 The Second Aorist retains the long vowel in the pen ultima of the Dual and Plur. except in riflijjxt, Si&o/xi and fyp. The 3d Person Plur. is often syncopated; thus gjSav for EfZrjtrav. * The Poets retain the long vowel, as Ict^i* rifyfi. The syllable Si is frequently rejected, as terra, or ktt^, riOij, &c. 3 The Second Aorist Imperative ends in Qi 9 except Qs$ and So$; with If, Evitrrfs;, &%€$, jv, >W> *l> Sing. >Ki y> OPTATIVE MOOD Present. Dual. >)TOV, ^T*JV, Second Aorist. Dual. YjTOV, rjTW, Plur. ypev, >jte, >jcrav & ev. 1 Plur. ypev, YiTSy ricocv & ev. SUBJUNCTIVE MOOD. Present. Sing. Dual. Plur. iCTT-W, a?, ?> arov, arov, U)fASV s UTS, COCTI, TI0-6U, ifi fa >}TOV, >}TOV, copsv, ITS, OOCTl, $!§-«;,* ft WTOV, COTOV. Second Aorist. tOftEV, cots, overt. Sing. Dual. Plur. *TW, (TTYjTOV, (FTTJTOV, TTcopsv, ]V«I. fautvvvou. Souvai. 1 PARTICIPLES. Present. Second Aorist. »jv. The Second Aorist is formed from the Imperfect by dropping the Redupli- cation; as ST107JV, %$7\v ; or by changing the Improper Reduplication into the Augment, as ta-Tr t v } ejv -OKT0 -euro -070 -UlfX.YjV -cbficci 1 Aor. 1 Fut. T£0-)JTJ 8o9-1JT* -OlfAY\V -o/pjv -w 0). -fio-Qon -ocrOat -ofxevog -etypevos • • « • -0*pjV ♦ • • • • • • • -Ol[J,YjV • • • • • • * * -o/jttqv • • • • -so-Qcu -opevo: -so-Qou -OffcSVOC -so-Qoti -ojxevo^ -yjvai -*k ->jvai ->}Vfla Ssj^fl-rjvaj -.if -so-flou -OjK-SVOJ -evQoti -6fJLSV0$ -so-Qoti -6[ASV0$ -etrtai -opevos 83 lumbers and Persons. INDICATIVE MOOD. rlk- 8fo- Islxw- Sing. .pct^croti, Tottf Sing. Present. Dual. Plur. ju,s0ov, a-Qov, o-Qov, /X-sStf, , (r3ov, crQuv, (r5e, cr0a>cr«v fatxvv- ) * In this Person in the Passive and Middle Voiced the Ionic dialect drops the PJV, 0, TO, OPTATIVE MOOD. Present. Dual. ju.e0ov, jv, Plur. ju,e0a, 5tvu|X£V-05, FORMATION OF THE TENSES. The Present is formed from the Present Active, by shortening the penultima, and changing [xi into px*, as Itrrvipu, 1. iBO'TY,G'lX[Xr i V f (TTrjjv, Plur. /xsta, - 3 OPTATIVE MOOD. Second Aorist. Sing. Dual. Plur. rra/- J Mr > ftlJV, 0, TO, petiov, } wpsQct, yjtrQe, wvtoli. S-aJjtta<, W 9 UJTOil, w[j,s6ovy axrQov, w £<., | ITOV, ITTJV, ] JjU-SV, C-£iV, £J£ ; £*_, UTOV, sItYjV, | £JjU,£V, eJT£, £i(7«V. 1 In the Attic writers slpt has a Future signification, as slpi r.a,\ dyysXwy Eurip. Tasy xcti gtft^aorjcroixgy, Dem. 88 Second Aorist. Sing. Dual. PJur. rcv, iec, >e, istov, istyjv, j *0jttsv, v ; Its, Troxrav. Second Aorist. 7s, Je'rco, TffTOy, Jstcov, 7sre, IsTOHToctf: OPTATIVE MOOD. Second Aorist. 7oj//./, m$, hi, | ;Wov, lornjv, Toiju-ev, Toits, 7o*eV. SUBJUNCTIVE MOOD. Second Aorist. loo, 1r,g, "y, ojtov, "y}tqv, | 'iojfievy «)ts, 7«xn. INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE* Present. Second Aorist. slvat or «/«i. Icov, lovvct, lav, MIDDLE VOICE. INDICATIVE MOOD. Perfect. slot, slug, shy | elserov, stotrw, etotpev, stars, s'otcri. Pluperfect. jfgjy, fag, fjsi, ysirov, yshw, I p^tv, fans, faiffat, I j or faev, jjre, r,jj«,», Ivis, h^h 'istov, Utov, I 1o[x.sv, 'ists, ieTcr* Imperfect. — — | • Te h*h I "stov, 'Utov, 'Ispsv, 7srs, lsij£, *>j, j it$&», isrvjv, <6^?yj ieTS, ieiruv. Perfect. Pluperfect. First Aorist. slxct. eUew. yjxcc. Second Aorist. ^j *?>> >k ST0V > £Tr ) v > ^sv, ere, ejtov, | ui^sv, yjts, cu, jfo I, | ?rov, riTOV, I J>pev, ?TS a «<7I. INFINITIVE MOOD. Present. ' Perfect. Isvctt. J elxsvou. First Future. Second Aorist. PARTICIPLES. Present. Perfect. U)c, isijV, First Aorist. First Future. ec/^oro/jtai. Plur. |&s0«, o-0£, vrai. P. p. Future. MIDDLE VOICE. INDICATIVE MOOD. Present and Imperfect like the Passive. 1 First Aorist. >|X-ap)V, a), olto, I apekv, avQov, ao-0ijv, I aju,s0a ? acrfe, «j/to. First Future. y((T-o^ai 9 yj 9 zTUi } | opsQoVj ej, ov. spzv-Q$, >}, ov. 2. 'H[xai y to sit. INDICATIVE MOOD, Present. ypai, ycai, YjTai, | if(jiskv, r^hv, \vbov 3 \ ypeQa, fafe; r^nai. 94 Imperfect. Sing. Dual. Plur. IMPERATIVE MOOD. Present. jjcto, ye-fay \ ^(rflov, vj), ov. 3. Elfxai, to put on. INDICATIVE MOOD. Present and Perfect. StflCU, i'KTCii) StTM, eTro, sia-TOy seoro & etrro, Pluperfect. — ' eivr#fc. s»vro. First Aorist. «w- V ©rc- Sapjy, cc, «T0j | updov, a uvi> ev, or Tg, 3 kt-^i, ys, yes, utov, utov, upsv I or//,sv Imperfect. ftr-Wi ijfr *}, | utov, a-njv, | u\lsv, uts, u & raw, tcovuv & rcvv. INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE. Present. Present. «jv, jxs0a, ?, ov. * The Passive 7riiu, to say. INDICATIVE MOOD. Present; Sing. Dual. Plur. $W'> $V$> $W*9 I Vutov, Qctrw, | tpotph, W> n> [ aT0V t oLTtp, I ctfiev, are, eurm* First Future. $v}, fUTOVy $0(.TVy fUTS, QotTWCTOiV. OPTATIVE MOOD,. Present. ♦«»-*} V, *3f, >}, 1JT0V, ^T»J^ (lev, ts, ev. First Aorist. $Y)JV, OtlfiSVy GUTS, OUSV. ■ In these two tenses the

jv. Second Aorist. First Aorist. PASSIVE VOICE. INDICATIVE. - IMPERATIVE. Perfect. Tre^oiTon. ttsQuo-Qoo. INFINITIVE. PARTICIPLE. MIDDLE VOICE. indicative mood. — Present. ipot-fLoUf ayco, *Ayvv(M t J foiyui, "Ayco, ^ *£ °°9 c *y*y°°> A. uyoxroitoti, Y)ycc ?£** w*> qyo"- ea£«, e«X«j nctyov, eoiyu. 1 yyoiyov, lyayo/x»jv. evco. J Avoava), J Verbs in a&o, frequent a lives, as Tpo^aKco, to run often. Verbs in a0w, derivatives, as 8»a>xa0«:, from S*a>xeo. Verbs in aiw, derivatives, as xegxlco, from xepaw. Alpeao, ^ 'yiA&ij, 3 , , v C uXexoo, Ct\EpCtU.YlV. 'AXeopou, uksvw, %\svjAsuapjv and ^Asa/x>jv by Syncope. 'ylAivSeaJj aX/co 5 u\(jAjxa. tz\dco, ukuxrx, clkaxroput, YJ\coci!va>, a\5v, 2d A. Opt. M. 2d Pers. /3Xs7o. /3/ow, fiiwo~w, fiefilwxu, j6«j3/»ju,ai, £/3, yvuxrop.au, syvwxu, syMoarpou, lyvaiorfyjy yvwjbrpXi\LaLt. eyvmy. to learn, j divide, j to AuKVCtiy ^rptvjy Js ® M > 1 ft ft 8sftr«), V Aiofiou, £sjo>, AkhaLa'aco, ~) Sa(7a; ? S&G-ofiiuiy s&acra, llxo~oL^Vy lidctactj. 0?fa)j h^otxciiy ilrfecij Sc'Svjp^a, Ss8>jyjxa», eS^5>j v ; eoax'ov. hocg^Yio-o^on, SsSagSvjna, I8ag0>jv, s&agflov. lmper. 8sS»0i and 8c/8i0i. e8iov, St'Sia. BiSaFX^O*. eSgijv and e$£av,. 1 The ancient form was yiyvopou and yryvoSffKw ; which was softened into y/voasu and yiviti'&Xio. 103 l\*t. fcr.r.crx, /• ^^ Zo^opou, Hmtwv, Syn. I§^iljy. C I'Jvolco, ^rsrftopou, E$JVT J T&fJ.r i v, Sfiuvr ; ;u,5£», kl'Jvr r ~) Syco, ViT'A, Ijcrajx-xi- o'iljy.x, SsSutrftai. Verbs in £a preceded by a consonant, as xuAn&». j^ } isic, id***, &hHv, P^. r t xa, ) Verbs in stx, derivatives, as $kiytjoo, from pJyx, E^M f ~\ fTctw, f £$;&;, e'oJia-cti, stir,TX,-i%rixx, PIup. »}^I*i iTSov, tiov, C e*&fl*i, Pi\ Opt. e!s=sV.> Inf. sfivscu. Verbs ki eiwo, poetical, as Igsslvx. e £ w > / l^ecs, eofrojAxi, slgqxa, swr^xi, s<£>s3rjjr. Verbs in eico, signifying design, formed from Futures, as o to design to see, from S-nroo, F. ofy». 'Ekxtvoo, 1 khxio, l\ot.«Ay0a. EuSo;, evdioo, sy&qceo. Evg f KTKW, gygscoy sugrpca, £ygrjO"«/X)jv, evgyxtx, ev^r^ou, ivge- 0rjy, £t>£=0ijcroju,af, su^oy, su^opjv. ** ai> \ (TXW*) 2d. A. Imper. c%s?. Z. Zaa>, ^ Sfrfr Zcoyyyco, "j J #», Zcti/WfjLi, J BeXco, QeXi-jo, 6riytxva) 9 Qfjyu), Biyyavca, blyci), \ Qvuca, $vr£ct), | 1 Qyjvcd, l/U e. 8e\rj '(£op*h IZ&fMiv, lyjMti, Jxopjv. C iXcLOl, WoLVOfiOUt iKoLQ-Oi^V, iA)JX«, »A»JVj ' iKoKTXOtlOU, 1 a, Ix^a,, £ ^ .^ p r M ?Xfi ^ "Iimifu, ~) , v > 7TTuw, Trnjcree, TreTrojxa, 7rs7rTupoit, STTTt)V, J Kctlai, "} xjjw, s'joja & exs/a, gxrjapjv & Ixgjapjv, exaov, xatxreo sxarjv. xgxauxa, Keouvvuco, C X6 £" w> X6 ?a°"^ exegacra, lxsgao-«pjv, xggar tr / 1 (roaaj. Kegotvvvfu, J , , rrt J x^aw, xgouroo, xixgotxx, xsxgupui, Ix^aflijv, x^a- 'KegSalm, "J xifiavw, \ xegfteM, xsffi, V. xXyyw, Perf. M. xexAijya. xixKoLyyciy \ KXcdoo, \ xAau, \ xkuizoOy xXuiri. /lay^avw, ActpfictVOQ, Auvtiuvco, A. Xrjx&, Xy)%co, XYjZopou, A?A>^a, Att. etA^a, eiX^yfxoLi, sXct^ov, Perf. M. XzXoyyjx. Xyftcv, A>j\|/o/x,aj, AsAi}j<£- $v}(TOtACiu eXaflov, sXafio^v. Xafiioo, X;X*xfir l x.a. XccfAfioo, Xci^oficti, iAa/Mj/ajtx,>5v, eAa/x^O^y. A^flco, Imp. eAijfioy, A^toj, Aijcrojaaj, XeXYjO-pai & XzXoLG-pai, eArjcrflrjv, eXciQov, hXo^o^v^ XsXrfix. Mu^OfLUiy MeXXoo, MsXce/ jji##3#, pafy&opai, efj*a()Yi epuxov, J 107 Ijx/y*jv, fAiyr) . > derivatives, as irjovacc from Tsoaco. vfeo, oftxtsw, > o$sa>, 0ktxo>, j o!8^<7co, a>§r)y,otot & QjW-aijU-oxa, 2 F. M. o^ou^ou. ovsoo, &VYjpca. Ilsgvccuiy Jlsj sV^aSyji/, 7rgot()Y)crofAou. TtSTuaoo, S7rsTCijv, STrayvjv, nccy reopen, 7rs7njya. PrtS. M. KlofJLCCiy irlvopoLiy smov, 2 F. M. TTiOUjW-at. Imper. 7n0*. 1 ris^aa?j /(> pa.ss ?//ifo another country ; irecvdw, to pass for the purpose of selling ; it^lcc^cci, in the Middle Voice, to buy a person, or thing, brought from another country. 109 Trjrcy, ~~H7U. I7*7r/(TXW, 7r\, %?«>> Perf". M. Isgya. p'jycM, pvr}G-Qfj,citi, sppurixx, sppwp. \iluyrpy puyricrofxcu. goacrso, slbxvci, spcooxa, efloopm, epf*»bp. XfizvvCoo, ^v. b > ctqow, (TTgwvco, ecrrgccvtx, ecrrgcocrot^viVy ea-rgcofLott, -Sj^sfee, 0"X««>. See page 104, rjUVO), i TSfA'OO, T£ffr>/0"a>. J 0>]v, zrpxyov, hfxxyriv, ThXTUJ, TfWfcco, sTfflza, TET/xjjxa, TEr/xijpaj, st/x/j- TSTCXCX.. ] i\ . £Ti7 3 TiT rpocv rococo), rgoocrofAsCii, argctiea., TSTgcofjix^ krgwQviv, T§'j)Qyir^soo f V7:oa-^r,~Oj^ai, v-zg-^u.ui, %w£0PY) X ui §y™> %a/gij xaivckj X uv ^y %ayo5jtt«^ *X, j x sX^ va * XoCtiVVVCO, "} , , . or ' , > X§ c:a > X§ M * M > MXqnP'** cv xsxpcorinu. XgwvvvfAi, 3 Xmvvvu), ~) x ow > X^?jU.a from Ttsirolyjy.oa, ft,?), fiv^y from (j,£^vr)^a,i, /xo^, vJ/aAao; from styatyou, y,wv, u,vyu,ujv from ju^av^acu ; » Second Person, distinguished by 2, and ending in cm, fly cna from ii%v *>&$ from XsKsfai, trio;, Qa,vpd?£» rryj, Sor^, irotrjrris, Tost twos, aWfyro;, xkovcttmos, T^ct, 7*^0 v, jW/CXHr^a, >taro7rr^oy, rewf, xQ}, yc t i$ t o$ 9 as f 9oga from stpQoga,, yoy,d$ from vsvopai, tfjtmevg from reroxa, rgotprj from rstgofa, rvirys from rsTvita,, |8oAV from jSgpoAa, ro/xof from riro/^a, &c. 114 Adverbs". 1 Those, which require particular notice, as distin- guished from the Latin, are the following; signifying In a place, ending in Qa, $/, yy, you, and o* ; as hroLoQa, here ; oupava^t, in Heave?i ; 7ravTaxfj and wav- Ta^oS, in every place ; irslcii, on the ground. Motion from a place, in fls and Qsv 9 as oupavaSs and oupavoQzv, from Heaven. Motion to a place, in &*, £g, as, as ovpavoitfe and Mpavoa-e, to Heaven ; %a[x6i%s, to the ground. Adverbial Particles, used only in Composition: Privation, from aveu, without? as uvudpo$, without water. . Increase, from uyoiv, much, as Gt£v\o$, a or olv, signifying \ , _ ' much wooded. Union, from upct, together, as ako^os, a consort. The following signify increase : apt, from apw, to furnish. pov, from /3oD$, aw ox. Ppi, from jfy i0u$, strong. 8a, from Saary£, thick. epi, from egw, to connect. Ka, JEolic for hoc. Xa, from Xlav, much. \i, the same. The Undeclinable Parts of Speech are comprised under the general name of Particles. Av before a Consonant drops the v, as dddvtxfos, immortal. Thus the English Article an, derived from the German ein, drops the n before a Consonant, as an arm, a man. 115 Jog signifies difficulty, as hmtoitfltb', t0 be unhappy. x Ne and vtj signify privation, like the Latin ne, as vrfisrjfr without pity. Metrical Synopsis of Inseparable Particles. 'Jp\ spi, fiov, U, &, A«, At, (Bgi, composita augent. Jv$, diff. ve, et »j ; priv. « privat, coltigit, auget. Prepositions. Six are Monosyllables : s\$, lx or £§, h, Tpo, 7rpb$, a-6v. Twelve Dissyllables : dc/jUp}, ava^ avr), '&*%=, Her. He taught the Greek lan- guage. 1 The Substantive is often changed into a Genitive Plura^ preceded by an Article ; as, 01 ayuk) tcov uvlpxv, Isocratts, Honorable men. 11 The Genitive of Personal is used instead of the Pos- sessive Pronouns ; as, Tyv wtbqu pov ti^us, Xen. Yvu honor my mother.^ Attic writers as of two terminations, consequently used as Feminine as well as Masculine. See page 19. When the Adjective is put in the Neuter after a different Gender, yjfi\^OL is understood, as oo^ov y dxtfsia., Soph. Thus triste lupus stabulis, Virg. The ellipsis is sometimes supplied, as ri ympa. fyd, Plato, And he said. 4 Similar to this is the French idiom la paix. Even in these instances a particular emphasis is often implied : thus rj e»j$4 may signify the peace desired ; o ^tan^njs, the great philosopher. In Italian 77 Tasso, and in French le Tasse, express the Poet Tasso. Thus in Hollinshed and Shakespeare, The Douglas. 121 *E$vi o SooxguTvis, Xen. Socrates said.' It is frequently joined to a Participle } as, *0 QuXtzTToov, Her. The guarding, i. e. he, who guards. 7. The Article in the Neuter Gender, before a Genitive, signifies elliptically possession or relation ; as, 'O 6so; Ta TM uvfyairctiv howsl, lsoc. Godf directs the affairs of men. 3 1 Xenophon frequently omits the Article, gLMkei Scyxfari^, Memor. but never when £<^ or gltfs follows. a The Article is sometimes dropped by the Poets, and the Parti- ciple is used alone, aseygwv, Pind. the inventor; dp'JJvtE;, Theocritus, the reapers. Thus in Horace spectans, the spectator; mugientes ? the oxen. *" Sometimes the ellipsis is supplied, as td tcuv Ot^olIojv it^dyi^oLra, In some cases the relation between the Article and the Noun following is so close, that the distinction of the property and the thing itself is scarcely perceptible, as rci tys tv%7}s o^eIolsb'/ei td$ p£ta(3o>,d$ Dem. Fortune has sudden revolutions. Thus to eilov, rdspd, are sometimes equivalent to syov, &c. The Plural Article, followed by diAip) and its^i with a proper name, signifies attendants, or the party, as of dtxo\ Ilf /ajxov, Horn, meaning the attendants of Priam ; eiretlQevto tup IcoKgdtEi o\ «Vp* tov"Kvvtov 9 iElian, meaning the party of Anytus. Here is evidently a distinction of persons, and Priam and Anytus alone cannot be implied. This is found in Latin : Qui circa ilium erant, Ter. Qui sunt a Platone, Cic. The Article has a peculiar construction in this elliptical form before an Accusative and an Infinitive Mood ; as to x a h £lv ro ^ ju^^acr* itdvtag, o-vptpvtov to7s dvfywifoig sort), Arist. This circumstance, that all should delight in imitations, is natural to men. This form is common in the Scriptures ; as sv rp slvou avrov, St. Luke; i. e. sv t

v paqTvptov oixv}x6otTe, Isoc. You have heard the witnesses. 3 1 Olpot is often prefixed, as olpoi row n&xwv, Aristoph. i. e. mxa. * This Genitive is governed by dvr) or if ^6. Than after a Com- parative is often expressed by rj, as ri yevotr dv skx.o$ psitpv, vj w rlv xougov, Isoc. 'Axou'o;, signifying to hear oneself called, or simply to be called, has the construction of Verbs of existence, as our ccKOvo-oujoa kxxo$, Soph. It is often used with the Adverbs eu, xaxw;, and xa,Xcu$, and followed by uVo or tta^oL with a Genitive, as xaxcwV dxoveiv vtfo rwv KOAirujy, Isoc. Thus Cicero, Est hominis ingenui velle bene audire ab omnibus. So Milton, Or hearst thou rather 'pure ethcrial stream. 124 Tl$ ovk oiv iiyourenTO t% up erfe ; Bern. Who would not admire virtue T To spav tmv $> -Aristoph. (svexx und.) Happy by his fortune. 7 ' rem el (pctvsvr aetotra,, Soph. ivrctvOx or} ?$d ovta, (ficovgia, Xen. Thus the three cases, with which prepositions are joined, may be used absolutely ; in some writers they are used promiscuously, evert in the same sentence. To the Accusative must be referred most of those instances, which are said to be in the Nominative, as Ssov, £%ov, rfagoy, &c. Those, which are really in the Nominative, may be construed upon common principles; such as that in Horn. II. I. 171, where i&v refers to the Nominative of the Verb o/a\ In other instances, a Verb must be understood ; but that anomaly is very infrequent in good writers, though in use- among the modern Greeks, as [u&svovrcts sycu oLitl ryv £xx\r t (rlav , siTetfsv y crsyy) rov o-rfiTiov cov, As I was coming out of the church, the roof of your house fell. And yet some instances are found in Latin : Ccterce philosophorum discipline — eas nihil adjuvare arbitror, Cic. Nam nos omnes, quibus est alicundc aliquis objectus labos, Omne quad est interca tempus priusquam id rescitum est, lucro est, Ter. 1 Thus in French, boire de Veau, du vin, &c. * Thus in. Latin, Fortunatus laborwn, Virg. Lassus maris tt liarum, Ilor. Sunt lacrymce rerum, Virg. The Genitive of Substantives is often used for an Adjective, in the New Testament and in the Septuagint, in imitation of the Hebrew idiom; thus avQgwieos rfs auct^ioLc, the man of sin, for the sinful man. This mode has been lately adopted in the English language. 126 Dative.' The instrument and manner of an action are put in the Dative ; a as, 'Apyvgsa^ Xoyxouri fxx^oo, xca ttocvtu xpatT^trets, Oracle to Philip, Fight with silver weapons, and you will conquer the world. "HXqlos %l$$i xou exs^vs lohcp, Horn. He struck him with a sword, and killed him by stratagem. 3 Verbs signifying to accompany ox follow, to blame, to converse, to pray, to use, are followed by a Dative ; as, T& vfjs$ ejTQvro, Horn. Him ships followed. IIi) ; Xen. What must he do? *T[uv tuvtcl irqdKTBoVj Dem. You must do these things, 2 f O auras, the same, is followed by a Dative ; as, T% uvtyiS ela) ^[xlotg £%ioi ol Tocvov -'Eschylus, Terrible in fight. TlcipHo to (is* (Toilet eiv&i <&iXQTrovo$, rrjv &e $/v%y)V <$i>J$ ; as ita^ovras ph tqvs 7ropifji.vY)ci£u; as ovgavov, Orpheus. Thus in Latin, Hacc eadem Terram, Mare, Siderajuro, Virg. A change of Voice implies a change in the Case of the Person ; but the Case of the Thing is preserved ; as m£?£ tfXeivra. svegysrov- j/,£0a, Xen. (joipanov sy.$vo[iEvos, Dem. Thus in Latin, Induitur faciem cultumque Diana?, Ovid. Inscripti nomina regum, Virg. a The Preposition is often understood ; as ^Vracrflaj rwv wfflpjfffr, Isoc. 3 Thus in Latin, Torqueor infesto ne vir ah hoste cadat, Ovid. Nihil valentius d quo inter eat, Cic. Some Verbs, which in the Active are followed by the Genitive R 130 INFINITIVE. The Infinitive Mood is used to express the cause or end of an action ; as, Tig (Tfpws %vv£Yi*e ^u^sa-Qoti ; Horn. Who induced them to fights The Pronoun Accusative, before the Infinitive, is frequently omitted ; as, "EQy) Ojtsiv (koivTov und.) Plato, He said that he was inquiring? The Infinitive is often preceded or followed by a Nominative; as, Arist. Sophocles said that he made men such as they ought to be ; Euripides, such as they are. or Dative of the person, and the Accusative of the thing, are pre- ceded in the Passive by the Nominative of the person ; as ol twv 'AQyvalwv iirt-rsrooc^iyoi tyjv, Thuc. They who were intrusted with the defence of the Athenians, or they to whom the defence of the Athenians was intrusted. 1 Similar to this is the English idiom. The Latin uses ut or quo with a Subjunctive. Sometimes in Poetry it admits the Greek con- struction, as, Dederatque comas diffundere ventis, Virg. a Thus in Latin, Sed redder e posse negabat (se und.) Virg. The Infinitive Mood and the preceding Verb, generally, but not always, relate to the same person ; sitis crov Xccfiopevog s\$ ro- 8e$ exsivo; ou noXspii, Dem. I s'ay that he does not make war.* The Infinitive is used with or without a Preposition, in the sense of the Latin Gerunds and Supines; as, 'jE7n<7Ta/xsvo£ woXejx/?siv, Horn. Skilled in the art of war* 'Jpv to jw,a5s7i/, Soph. In learning.* 'Ikxvos sIttsIv ku\ irpoL%eu, Lysias, Qualified to speak and t& act.* Shakespeare, For that I am some twelve or fourteen moonshines log of a brother. Sometimes on signifies elliptically what is the reason why — ; as, bItioi on rdv, Soph. I shall not cease having God for my defender. *Jt\e'£$ Isoc. 9$ Upi$ ithrp rols \}ogoy avlpci, Horn. A mail of counsel ought not to sleep the whole night? Adverbs of quality are elegantly joined with the Verbs £%(*)> 7roL£pvo, 1 Ma generally denies, unless it is joined with vou ; vr t affirms, unless joined with a Negative. The Preposition is sometimes expressed : sk 0sw to reXo; lv, With. With : crvv 6e$, Her. With God. Accusative. Elg, or eg, Into. Into : el $ ciq-tv xciTcifiulveiv, Isoc. To descend into a city. Genitive and Accusative. Aik, Thro 9 . Thro': G . 8.«a ^6ijxo5vo.f, Xen. Thro 1 the winter. A. hot 7T0VTQV, Find. Thro' the sea. After : G. $*a puxgov xP^ ov j iEschyl. After a long time. On account of : A. hoi jv xura. xAwj*o^^ Horn. They sat in seats. 'Tvrlp, Over. Above: G. uvep yqs sen ; Eurip. Is he above ground? For: G. Qvrjfrxao uirep povv}3 ^zra. Ioutol, Horn. Jupiter went to a feast. After : A. ol vo/xoj jxs-ra rbv Ssov Eurip. Under the sun. Under : A. aVayaywv vVo Qohuiots, Xen. Leading him under palm-trees. 144 Metrical Synopsis of Prepositions. 'AM

manum circum ; ?re^i c&rrtf, Circa urbem. 77PO N tUvcov, pro natis ; ijv Trpo Sopoio, Ante aedes. II PC? 2 yys, a terra ; wpo£ J/oj a>ju,vu, Per Jovem ; eyv ttpbs ' & MX$ l >asfar as. 'Eirslnsp, > after. 'Ens'trot, J "ha, where. "ha, that, Imp. Fut. Aor. Kalnep, altho\ Me I that, Pr. and Fut, )when. Ote, ) INDICATIVE, OPTATIVE, SUBJUNCTIVE, and INFINITIVE. *Av, xe, 5 Potential. *Eco$, as long as. MrjTTQTs, lest. nph, before. '11$, that. f E< is used by the Dramatic Poets with the Indicative and Opta- tive only. By Homer it is used with the Subjunctive also, joined to av or xs. When ei is used with an Imp. or an Aor. Indicative, the Verb in the corresponding clause, preceding or following, is put in the Indie, with aV, as s) pj tor eirfiyovv, vvv otv ovk tvipgouvopyv, Aristoph. * Mrj, forbidding, with the P resent, governs the Imperative, with the Future the Indicative, with the Aorist, when it refers to the Past, the Optative, when it refers to the Future, the Subjunctive. 3 These Particles, dtv used in prose, and xs and xev in verse, give a Potential sense to the Verb. Thus in the Imp. el%ov signifies I had, el^oy &v, I would have. In the 2d Aor. ahov means I said, slifov div, I would have said. The Present Optative with dv is often used by tragic Writers in the sense of a Future Indie, thus psvoip oV, Soph. I will stay. *Av frequently signifies soever, as atfavfl' oV aV Xsyou, Aristoph. Whatsoever things I may say : I Ti xzv xaravsucrw, Horn. Whatever I may nod. *Av in this case follows the Noun or Particle, and precede* the Verb. 147 INDICATIVE, OPTATIVE, and INFINITIVE. )f "I sh 'Evsir}, ~) • "Hers, so that* f since, ' optative and subjunctive. *EirsoLv, after. My, lest. Conjunctions Postpositive are yap, [xh, $h, re, TOfVUJ/. These are Prepositive and Postpositive, d\ apa, ^ ;w. The rest are Prepositive. These are called Expletive, which are not easily translated into other languages, but have a peculiar expression, the loss of which would be discovered by a critical judge of the niceties of Greek composition : ap, apa, au, ys, Stj, o^Ta, Qtjv, xs, xsu, /jltjV, vu 9 wsp, Trow, to), pa, and some others used by the Poets. CORRESPONDING PARTICLES. 'Eneildiv, when, — r>jvixauT«, then. *Hi, as far, — tuvtyi, so far. *Hpos, when, — t^oj, then. 'Hvlxct, when, — Tijvixa, then. KaAkitsg, as, — ovtoo, so. Miv, indeed, — Be, but. Msv, both, — Zs, and. 'Ofioiooe, like, — wa xgarourj, Ttrzfai/ra. irgnayvSa,, &c. In Pastoral, Elegiac, and Epigrammatic verse the syllable is more frequently short. In Dramatic poetry the following rules may be observed : A short vowel before a soft or aspirate Mute followed by a liquid, and before a middle Mute followed by g>, remains short. In Tragedy the syllable, if not final, is often long. A short vowel before a middle Mute followed by A, a, or v, lengthens the syllable in all Dramatic poetry. That reason of that difference between Heroic and Dramatic poetry 150 A short Vowel is sometimes made long before a may be this. In the grave, majestic cadence of Heroic verse Spon- dees are frequent ; but the Iambs and Tribrachs of the language of the Stage require short syllables. Hence the doubtful vowel in $$dv&, (pQlvujf riyw, &c. is long in Homer, and short in Iambic metre. It is remarkable that the short syllable prevails, in proportion as the atyle approaches to that of conversation. This difference will bt traced in the progress from Homer to Aristophanes. When the syllable is lengthened before two consonants, the vowel in pronunciation assumes one of them, as $ex-\ Monosyllables in *>(/, i7roc 3 as Qpty, dp'nrog. T is short, as nop, nupog. Except in Words of two terminations, as tyopxwj and (popxug, With xr\pu^ xvjpvxog. rpty, ypv7rog ; yuty, yvwog ; fiifipvt;, fisfipvxog ; are common. 1 Penultima of the Tenses of Verbs. The quantity of all Tenses generally remains the same as in the Tense, from which they are formed ; as from xpivco are formed sxplvov, xpwofjt.au, \xp~ivoyjr\v ; from xpivw are formed xkxpixa, xsxp^ifAou, sxpldyv. 2. The Perfect follows the quantity of the First Future, as , Saupdorcu ; uo^l^a), vo^Ta-a) ; x'kv^co, X"h\J(T(t}. But acrw is long from Verbs in aco preceded by a Vowel, or in paw, as 6 saw, Qsavw ; $paw, §pd(rw. law and uXsua>. Oxytons of the First Declension, as %apa. Accusatives in a from Nouns in sug, in the Attic D alect. VocatiVes from Proper Names in ag, as Afoeta, 17a A At/. 1 The Doric a, 2 as a nay a for tJ 7rr}yrj, fiopia for fiopiov. I long. The names of letters, as f?; with xp7. The Paragoge in Pronouns and Adverbs, as ouroo-), vovi : except the Dative Plural, as ; with yp6 : 5 is common. ra.va.ycz; compounds of psrg'Jj, as ysoo^sTca; go. preceded by a diphthong, as -rreT^a, except au^a, Aau'^a, ^Asu^a, opxvg. Accusatives from og long, as o with thee I mean to live, are generally scanned thus, " i -" I ■" l - But their harmony will be improved by the following division of the feet : - r - ! ^ jVL a If a syllable is wanting, the verse is called Catalectic ; a com- plete verse is called Acatalcctic. X 162 vided into regular Dimeters, which of course can admit no licence in the final syllable, arid which must always be followed by a Parcemiac. But as in this mode of division it must often happen that a single Metre remains before the final Parcemiac, that Metre is placed in a se- parate verse, and is termed a base, although it "would be perhaps more properly called a supplement The only restraint in Anapestics is, that an Anapest must not follow a Dactyl, to prevent the concurrence of too many short syllables ; that each Metre must end with a word ; and that the third foot of the Parcemiac must be an Anapest. Anapestic Dimeter Acatalectic. 1st Metre 2d Metre I A Parcemiac, or Dimeter Catalectlc. 1st Metre 2d Metre 1 I 2 3 4 Anapestic Base, or Monometer Acatalectic. One Metre 165 ACCENTS. 1 The Acute is used on the last syllable, the penultima, or the antepenultima. 1 Accents wore first marked by Aristophanes, a Grammarian of Byzantium, who lived about 200 years before the Christian aera. He probably first reduced them to a practical system, because some marks must have been necessary in teaching the language to foreigners, as they arc used in teaching English. For the proper modulation of speech, it is necessary that one syllabic in every word should be distinguished by an elevation of the voice. On this syllable the accent is marked in the Greek lan- guage. This elevation does not lengthen the time of that syllable, so that Accent and Quantity are considered by the best critics as perfectly distinct, but by no means inconsistent with each other. That it is possible to observe both Accent and Quantity is proved by the practice of the modern Greeks, who may be supposed to have retained in some degree the pronunciation of their ancestors. Thus in rvTrroyAvrjV they lengthen the first and the last syllable, and elevats the tone of the penultima. In our language the distinction between Accent and Quantity is obvious. The Accent falls on the antepenultima equally in the words liberty and library, yet in the former the tone only is elevated, ill the latter the syllable is also lengthened. The same difference will appear in bdron and blicun, in level, and lexer, in Redding, the name of the place, in which these observations are written, and the parti- ciple redding. The Welsh language affords many strong examples of the difference between Accent and Quantity, as diolch, thanks. It has been thought by many that the French have no Accent; 164 The Grave is used on the last syllable only; but when that syllable is the last of a sentence, or followed by an enclitic, 1 the Acute is used. but in the natural articulation of words this is impossible. Their syllabic emphasis is indeed in general not strongly expressed ; but a person conversant in their language will discover a distinctive ele- vation, particularly in .public speaking... ThiiasJfl.nvany ..cases arbi-. trary: thus the word cruel, in expressing sorrow and affection, will on the French stage be pronounced cruel : in expressing indignation, and Horror, cruel. On one of the three last syllables of a word the Accent naturally falls. Hence no ancient language, except the Etruscan, carried it farther back than the antepenultima. The modern Greeks sometimes remove it to the fourth syllable; and the Italians stilt farther. In English it is likewise carried to the prai-antepen ultima, but in that case a second Accent appears to be laid on the alternate syllabic, as determination, unprofitable. In poetry the metre wilt confirm this remark. That variation existed in the different States of Greece, which is now observed in the different parts of Britain. The JEolians adopted a baryton pronunciation, throwing the accent back, saying" syev for iyaj, Uo$ for ho$. In this they were consistently followed by the Latin dialect. But some words in the latter language changed their accent: thus in the Voc. Valeri, the Accent was anciently on the antepenultima, and was afterwards advanced to the peiiultima. hi English a contrary effect has been produced : thus acceptable is now acceptable ; corruptible, corruptible ; advertisement, advertisement ; &c. In Welsh the Accent is never thrown farther back than the. penultima, and is rarely placed on the last syllable.' In Scotland the Accent is oxyton in imitation of that of France, probably on account of the close connexion, which formerly subsisted between the two countries. 1 The Grave is said to be the privation of the Acute, and to be understood on all syllables, on which that is not placed. The 165' The Circumflex is used on the' last or the penultima/ The Acute and the Grave are put on long and short syllables ; the Circumflex on syllables long by nature/ and never on the penultima, unless 'the last syllable is Short.' Acute with the rising inflexion has been, by a musical term, called the Arsis, the Grave with the falling inflexion, the Thesis. But where.it is expressed on the last syllable, the Grave has the force of the Acute, marking an oxyton. Indeed no substantial reason is given for the use -of both Accents. -Perhaps it may be -said that the Grave is used to show that the voice, after the elevation, must fall to meet the common, or what Aristotle calls the middle, tone of the next word ; but that the Acute is preserved at the end of the sentence, where this change is unnecessary; that the interro- gative r give me. 3 These may be called Proclitics, as they incline the Accent on the following word. Thus in English the Article the is pronounced quickly, as if it made part of the following word. In poetry it coa- lesces with it, as Above th' Aonian mount. When these Atonies arc at the end of the sentence, or following the word, to which they are naturally prefixed, they recover their Accent, as eyyvrs; crirsoiji dy'sfioLv , wvc, ypawV, rave, ov$, ira;, 'TtWft tf'Jf ; but many of them are probably 167 Monosyllables of the Third Declension accent the last syllable of the Genitives and Datives, but the penultima of other cases, as S. %eh, X SI P^ X Si fi yj*? a% ^* X-^?-> XsipoTv. P. x£?*S> X £l P"> v > X S P^ xf 1 ?*^ Dissyllables, if the first is long and the last short, circumflex the former, as ;xoU, Toy^a), %£to 9 if not with a ; Preposition, as IxrfioKof. 6. Compounds of tIhtco, xtbivw, rpi$ay with a Noun, if they have an Active signification, as 7rpojroToxog, she who produces her first child ; ^ifyoxTovog, he who kills with a sword ; pyrpoxrovog, a matricide ; KaorpoQog, he who feeds the people* If they have a Passive significa- tion, they follow the general rule, as TrpeororoKog, the first-born child ; t;i$oxrovog 3 he who is killed with a first syllable. Hence may be deduced another proof of the difference between Accent and Quantity. In Latin, the Accent falls on the first syllable of animus, and of tibi, but that syllabic is not lengthened in pronunciation. The Accent fails on the iirst syllable in carmina ; but if an Enclitic follows, as carmin&que, the Accent, which is inad- missible on the prat-antepenultima, must be laid on a syllable, which cannot be pronounced long. In reading Greek the general practice of this country follows the Latin rules of Accent. In words of two, and of three short syllables, the difference of the French and English pronunciation is striking. The former makes Iambs and Anapests, the latter Trochees and Dactyls: the French say fug's, fugimus ; the English fugis, fugi- mus. In many instances both are equally faulty: thus we shorten the long is'iw fcivls, the plural offavus; they lengthen the short is iu oris, the Genitive of os. 169 sword; ^rpoxrovosy he who is killed by his mother ; T^aoTpoQog, he who is fed by the people. 1 1 The difference of Accentuation serves also to mark the? difference of signification, and has on some occasions given precision to tha language, and even determined the ambiguous meaning of a law. this distinction a few instances may be given : Of ayajv, leading ; aA^e;, truly; aXXa, other things ; arfXoo;, unnavigable ; af>a, then ; ftf, life; $l$or/,Bv, we give ; 3oxo$ t opinion ; iitri, he goes ; svi, he is in ; *xfy a » enrmt y ; Zujov, an animal ; §ia, «a sight ; $eujy, running ; lov, a violet ; xaAct^, a cable; Xao$ t a stone ; teuxy}, a poplar ; p,6vr) alone ; ftvgtoi, ten thousand ; veo$, new ; yojwj, a law ; cf/xw*, yet ; iteiQu), I advise ; tfovygos, laborious ; f$°X S* a c °urse ; gw/xo;, a shoulder ; ayoyy, a contest. OLAYfiag, true. aXXd, but. dicX&os, simple. acoL, an interrogation. /3jo^, a bow, faSifiEv, to give. &5X0J-, a beam. sir;, they are. sv), in. *%0f a, hostile things. %,mv, living. fetx, a goddess. 0£u5y, of gods. lov, going. xaXu>$, well. Acto;, the people. Asukij, white. /xonj, a mansion. fivgloi, innumerable. veo;, a field. Yopos, a pasture. e/AwV, together. 7T£i8cv, persuasion. tfoyrigog, wicked. t^ayhs, a wheel. «J|xo£, cruel. The list might easily be extended, particularly in marking tha 170 7. Compounds of Perfects Middle with Nouns and Adjectives, as ao-r^oXo-yoc, oIxovo'ju,oc, 7ra[j~ts\o$. UccdUv is abbreviated from tfotrfoigiov, or from tfouSlfoov, which is formed from itoCtg as alylSiov is from a?£. Thus veav'untos and ir'aiSlffKos are probably formed from vsocvla and tfcutii), with eivKuj. It is natural that the cases of a Noun or Participle, and the persons of a Tense, should retain the Accent through every inflection ; thus from Xa^itois Aapra<$'c)$'/&c. from fvit£i$ 9 rvifivro^, &c. and from tvituj, Tvirov.tAsv, rwrrovpcu, &c. So Jyos, of which Xlya. is still extant; and otiitoXog from ah/otoXog, This is a faint outline of the system: but an acute observer of the etymology and origin of the language will easily solve the difficulties »f Accentuation on similar principles. 1 The Diphthongs ou and oi are considered as short, for they were generally pronounced at the end of words like j. Thus ai and oi are in Russian pronounced i. This pronunciation seems in some in- stances, to have affected the quantity, as faoupcu (pltyv, Horn, ypyt 7£ nod yfeaos, Hes. Cplv psv Qsot oo7sv y Horn. &c. But the best critics have suspected the genuineness of the readings, and proposed emendations. In the last passage, Qeo) may be read as a mono- syllable. 4 O'ixoi cannot be thought an exception, as it is put for «ma>, of vhicli it is the ancfent foi'm. 188 The Genitive Plural of the First Declension circum- flexes the last Syllable, as poixraiv ; except Adjectives of the 1st Declension, whose Masculine is of the 2d, as ay log, aylcov, ay la, nyiwv : with erTjo-iVov, ^Koivcov, and %prj.st ; ecrracog^ e(rrayg. z 1 MrJ^Tjo and Qvydrrjg, when not syncopated, accent the penult, in every case, except the Vocative: a case, which from its nature frequently throws back the Accent, as dvef, ■rrdrzo, onamej.. 4 Except metals, as dgyvgeog dcyvgovc-* with dhkphos d$s\, which it uses for o. * A marked difference exists between the Old and the New Attic. The former used short and simple forms ; the latter softened, and in some cases lengthened the word. The former used the short words hi-/, d\clv, QsgetrQcu', velv, K-/a7v ; for these the latter substituted focr- (ABvetv, a,\rflsi-;, Sscuctivzo-fai, vrfieiv, xvytisiy. The Old neglected i, which the New added or subscribed; the former wrote kccm, xaolcu, Awcrroc, irouJ^o; ; the latter x&fttf, jcAa/w, Aw/oto^, tff wVaO£. Other changes marked the distinction. The New Attic in some cases avoided the sound of po$, [jsvpflvy), Odkocrrcc, itcarrvo, a. It is indeed probable, that in the simplest forms of the language those tenses were similar; the principle of variery and of precision introduced those changes and additions, which adorned the luxuriant language of ancient Greece. That of modern Greece has returned to the original simplicity; it has only one Past Tense ; as y^a^w, sy§ x^a, ; itA&Koo, BTrXsfa; yvui' feov, eyvujQura. ; vJ/aAAw, l^ctKa. Even the Accentuation underwent some change. The Old Attic said Ojxolo*, t^iicCm \ the New, opoio$, rgoTtouw. z 178 It changes long into short, and short into long sylla- bles, as Kscug for Xao'c. In Nouns, it changes o, 01, and ou of the Second Declension into o> ; as N. V. tewg, G. tew, D. Xea>, A. Tiscou, &c. T * It changes sig into tjc, as iV7r% for Iwweig. It makes the Vocative like the Nominative, as cS TToiTsp, 10 $iXo$, Soph. In some Nouns it makes the Accusative in a>, instead of ft>v, tod or tt)Via, as 'Kayto, Mivco, JJoasidto for XayaJV, M'iVtoot, Uova. a It changes the Gen, eo£ into s«>c, as fia, as from ea) ; thus 3sA7rreTO)(rav ; rv^dvrwv for T'Jvf/arftxrav ; and g'&cog'olv into &Kf l (ri, Hes. for 5su/a7£ xe$a\a7g. In the Second it adds * to the Dative Plural, as toigti spyoicri, Her. for roig epyoig, neglecting v before a vowel in prose. In the Third it changes s into tj, as fiaA£V01 £Jo"a. It forms the First Aorist Participle in aig, aira, aiv 9 as Tm|/-a*£, aura, aiv for r^-ag, aca, av. In the Passive it forms the 1st Person Dual in ea-ftov, and Plural in sv of the Genitive Plural into acov, and ei£ of the Accusative into aig, as fxovo-acov, povo-oug for fJLOixraiv, [xova-ag. In the 2d Declension it drops the i subscript in the Dative, as xog-ju,o> for xoVjiuo. In the 3d Declension it changes the Accusative of Contracts in a> and cog into wv, as a&dSv for aJSo'a ; and the Genitive oug into a>£. It forms the 3d Person Plural of the Imperfect and Aorists of the Indicative and Optative in ray, as £TU7r- Tojt/, as T-jirrrp for T'J7TTSJV. In the Passive it changes [tdoi. into j&sfls and ^tsfl^j/, as Ti>7TTo[AeQe and tuttto^sSsv for TV7TT0fjL£$a. The Poets have several peculiarities of inflection. They use all Dialects ; but not indiscriminately, as will be seen in the perusal of the best models in each *.« . . .» - . . , — . .i . i. , . .,,. , . — .,. ... «. ■ , 1 This is properly in the Baotic Dialect. 184 species of Poetry. In general they adopt the most ancient forms, as remote from the common Dialect. 1 They lengthen short syllables, either by doubling the Consonants, as ea-crsrai for e£, (raa)(ripzvai for They drop short Vowels in pronunciation, to diminish the number of syllables, as fyu,aa> for ^a^aw, sysuTo for syivsro. They drop syllables, as aX into o/o, as 7roXe'ju.o/o xaxoio for rroXspou xoLxau, Horn, and o/v in the Dual in o/i'v, as hoyouu for "koyoiv. In the 3d Declension, they form the Dative Plural by adding / or tri to the Nominative Plural, as 7ra7c, irouhg, 7ra/oW/ or 7ra/oWo"/. In Neuters they change a into £ * yco IpttiV ■*■ ' ir YI[AS1U§ c-eloQ tl T»V*J T»V, TS'iV PI. and Dual like syw, substituting u for a and >j. 2 A 186 0. A. Ionic. f!o, oh, holo, so, eoflfV 05, Doric. iff JEolic. Poetic, jtclv, vh l w f, j - — I. ,, Cff|^ -— — . e/x/xi evri JE. rifM — — P. ' .,. ■ " , sst, ljr >i » . ea>, em eys, eys ejj, e»j, Dual. Plur. elcopev, Iweri, Infinitive. — Present, I. Ijxsv, stftzv D. eftevott, »)]x?v, ijju-gc, s helium for dutllum. 0, L. alibi from «AAo0/ 3 «£er from o50ag. M, JE. /3up/x#£ for fj.vpp.rig. Jl, D. fiixgos for wrK(tQ$; ab from «tt^ sw6 from frr, Z»ax?^ from 2ry£or, comburo from vvqqm. T, P. xa/3/3«/\e for xarfiute ; libra from AiTga. 1 This is by no means -a complete list of the Changes. The reader's attention will easily increase it. It must however be noticed that these changes do not take place indiscriminately. Thus, if the Attics changed . It is added, y^ai for vipo^. Jt is dropt, ctLx for y«7a, ictt for £yw, hence the Italian ?'o, J; /ac from y«Xa ; //a^/s for gualm. It is put for the Digamma, ylvro for /=vro, yo7vo; for /olvoj or jT, X). S« for yij ; dulcis from yXyxuc. 2, D. jxagoi for patys ;* odor from $$*, ©, L. Dews from (Neg» inde from «4s? ; daughter from 0yya- -njp, door from 0ypa ; murder for miirther, Bedlam for Be i Idem. * r is comrautable with the other Valatah x and ^, to %vhrch may he added £. * A is commutablc with the other *peniah 19 and t, to which may fce added £, a and v. 3 Or, in other words, omitting cr, for g is composed of «£. ^191 Jf, /. e£jx>j for ocrju,)) ; D. 7§jx«y for to^tsv, xsxoBjisvoj for xsxajv ftivof ; medius from fj.i, «vfyo$ for a:/^- ; l medulla from pgg- Xo 5 - • prodes for /woes, redeo for reeo, m^i for me. It is dropt, luixr) for &«>x^ ; ros from S^oVoj. ^4, ^. \vjjc for Xaoj ; talentum from TaAavrov; exerceo fromarceo. H, I. e}go; ; /era from ^jjg. J, X. Muste 7, from Movo-ou ; mare for #?an, itde for s/61. O, D. c-sO for crou ; genu from yo'vw, pedes from 4rall|. T, X. pejero from jaro. fl, L. stamen from arrowy. It is added, .4. Icugaxa for a^axa, IfliAa; for $=A«>; J. u$*\$=q<$ for a§gA£o$ ; AutsIvos from Latitats* ' Avruovfivog from ^rf/i- toninus ; lateo from Actfla;, pile us from 7f7Aoc. It is dropt, ftou for g/*ou ,• /. /3aA= for e/3«As ; A. rjgns for ij'ga?* ; rwo from l^yw, iibo from XetfZoo, into from vtva ; ma- Titus for mareititSy Vertumnus for VertomenosS Z F, ^S. /. 4* I*. £,, D Euj L 192 H Trq^y^cti for Kgoiy{j.ci, crofty for trotyla, ogyv for c^ai/. 1 fSacnArja for f*ourt\£oL 9 r^zncL for tirsnct; P.r^vai for T&ivcu. 'naXriog for TraXoucg. xr t vog for exiivog. Ulysses from 'OSu^j-eu^. It is added, P. ifov for ojv ; D. otm) for oV»; arjes from ox&. It is dropt', ^. sT/jcsv for eivytev ; Mars from "Ag^g ; audibam for audiebam. i. e ^, JE. \[>v#0£ for \|/su'8o£, Tlgo^svg from pjSoc. 3f, -^f. Sofyx^ for 8u X§? TOCl * and yjri$ 9 z'ntw for iituo, 0e, xXslcv for xXsuj, &c. 3 Till the end of the reign of Augustus, the Gen. of Nouns in ius and ium was in i 9 as Corjieli, consili, peculi: the only difference then between the Genitive and the Vocative was in the Accent, the Gen. of Valerius was Valeria the Voc. Vdleri. Afterwards the i was doubled in, the Genitive. * C was pronounced like k ; hence docitum was easily abbreviated to doktum or doctum ; thus audacter for audaciter. 2 B 19 i It is added, specus from . X, J), j^woj for xoivo'c. 5*, ^. £uv for o-uv; 1 ^'aj: from ^7ac, ^i.r from vitro-a ; Ulyxes for Ulysses. It is added, comix from xogdovi\. It was preserved in Composition, exfociunt for ejjugiunt* O A, D. tsttoqci for riiTG-upsg ; TroAe^oc from 7raAapj, as pugna from pugnus ; dorno from Sajxw. £, ^. AeAoya for AeAsya ; woiws from ve&f, o/ewm from eAaioi/ ; anciently tfoste?' for vester. I, _L. o//« for ?7/i. ?, L. wo^ from vu£, anchor a from ctyxvp* ; anciently dederont for dederunt, servom for servum, colpa for ctf/pff. 1 The Doric puts jjf for cr in the Future of Verbs in £a>, t£j>oc for £fVoc, ascia for ag/y^. 196 SI, 1. #*} for §»ij ; • J5» oga for dig*. It is added, P. tf from /3a/3a» ; scripsi for scribsi. 7, K, D. ttvol^os for xvxpog ; lupus from Auxoc. M, D. oinroiTU for OjXjxara. T, D. (T7ra5«ov for ora&iov ,' _/E. 7rejX7re for TreVrs, 7F. pj/wp ; P. xa?r7r£o-ov for xar«7r=a-ov ,* pavo from racoc. #, /. 67re£>js for l^efijj ,' purpura from irogfvgot. #, L. p«/e.r from \J/uAAa. It is added, lapis from Aa«s; sumpsi, sumptum for --sumst, sumtum. It is dropt, /flfas from TrXaruj. P J, X. meridies for medidies, amis from audio. A, D. $civgo; for pawAo$ ," p^aysAAov from Jla gel I u?n. N, L. dims from 8s*vo£, legere from XeysiV, or, in the Compa- rative, from coy. 5*, ^. apprjv for uqh for o-Qhy'vcia for Trao-a; 1 /. 6fleai for (pofSsnai ; P. oris for o ; dixe for dixisse. T Ay D. Qspiro c for Q&fi&oc ; intus from &8ov, wzw^s from (tufas > aput for apwd ,- p«s£ for passed. 0, I. owns for a30i£ ; lateo from A«0a>, triumphus from fl^/- a/AjSoc. J£, i). tyjvos for exsivoc ; Lutetia from AsuxstIu. A, L. satis from «X*$« 17, JD. «Tra for utticol ; studium from o-Troy&j. X, -^. flaAarra for '6aXourxu$ for j, triumpkas from Qglupfipg ; further for farther. B, L. aufero for abfero. E, D. opYiyugys for opjysp^ ; fugs from rsoj, unus from Ivoj, i, triumphus from Qglotpfios. 9, D. $vjp for 0)jg, hence /era ; yb?75 from Syga. i£, L. /eo from %Aa/a>. U, A acr^agayov for «(T7ra^ayov ,' a Bosphorus from jBoWoga^, 1 The modern Greeks pronounce u like j, i. e. like the French i grec, or y. i 1 This change has been adopted in the French language, thus autre from alter, chaud from calidrfs; haut from altus ; au for d le. 3 The Attics generally change it into

c into %, after a-, as cr£oyyo£ for (rtfoyyos, G"xj:\lfo$ for crxeXitiss. 200 trophceum from Tg07rctiov ; fire from Trup, father from TTXTrjp ; for from pro. X y -L. ^os from yXoog. * It is added, ^E. jv for g^>]v. Sometimes it is changed into an aspi- rate, as heu from j/3a>a) for ^jBotoo. E, P. 7T\WC0 for 7TASCO. H, .4. sppajywj for epprjyc^; pronus from tt^v^, for from xijg. J, ^. a^lcoxa for aipejxa. O, ^. 7ro\ect)$ for tt6\so$. T, I. pa for /tui. ^4u, J. rpooj^a for rpaOju,a ; plodo for plaudo, codex for caudex, sodes for si audes. Ov, A. tew for Aaou ; J. wv for o3v ; D. ^wcra for ju,cu ] to break, alto, u\y\[Xij uaic, a. am [xi 9 ccvxg, dvouvct), Stpotiog, OLpHTTO'/y UVTV, OtV5>' §3ttJCT, envpbc, eTSwXoy^ exoov, eixsAo& e\=oc y eTxocri 5 eA Digamma. Hence to 'Ar^for^ or 'Arff/*<% succeeded 'Arp!^; to 'kyjxFlg *A^a*o;. Thus aw, afuu made a/cru/ in the Future, changed into avg-y ; $a.w t ydfu into ipz6 / IO/XVJ. "iXiOCy hsc 9 iVlOVy v icrr^iy hoc. O oxgsc, Olfyoly olxoc, OlVOCy ouKutxoCy cvXoc, GVOOV. n cog. The Latin Dialect naturally adopted the JEolic Dl- gamma, which it expressed generally by V, as will be seen in the following list : 207 «yojx«i, vagor; ulwv, aevum ; aAcu7nj£, vulpes ; uogvoc, avernus ; ft^an;, achivus ; aw, aveo : fiiocjo, vivo ; (5o=c, boves; lloc, divus ; sloea, video; swan, viginti ; sKoo, volvo; spa), vorao ; evSUw, vindico ; evsToi, veneti ; evregog, venter j spX M > vergo; epog, seryus ; epco, verto ; eo-Qris, vestis ; s(T7rspog, vespera ; sittiol, Vesta ; cro£, vetus; rig, ver; 1%o$, viscus*; 7ov, viola ; % vis; jw, ivi ; xux, cavo ; x-puog, cervus ; x\=ic, clavis ; xogog, coitus ; Xxiog, laevus; hugy, larva; Xzio$, levis ; Xouoo, lavo; \6w, solvo ; ^«A>j, malva ; y-aopoc, Mavors; ftaw, movco ; vaio$, naevus; vavc, navis ; f v/oj, novus ; vixtb, vircco ; clxo;, vicus; olvos, vinuni ; o^, ovis ; oXw, volvo ; ox^oc, vulgus ; oca, voveo ; nctvooc, parvus; nplco, privo; pica, rivus ; o-xsubs, saevus^_ txoos, pavo; v\yj, sylva ; vco, uvesco ; vobv, ovum, &c. 1 NauV was probably pronounced nafs, hence navis. Thus Ilau- £ o$, pafros x was transposed into parvus, vzv%'jv into nervus. 208 Sometimes by other letters, among which are B, as m dubiurn ; fiApmSy morbus ; p/oao, robur ; uco, uber. C, as srspa, cetera. , F, as ayopa, forum; opfoog, famulus; afolg, felis ; hsg, funes ; uw, fluo. R, as fior h Boreas; euco, uro ; "xaog, hilaris; >tfof, murex ; (xoucracouy musarum ; vuog, nurus, &C* 1 In English, the DIgamnia has become W, as vsog, new ; xinuniy wine; vicus, wick-, fistula, whistle; vespa 9 wasp; mcii way. It is pronounced, without being written, in the word one. V, as vaog, nave, &c. * The Digamma lias been considered as a principal agent in the for- mation of Tenses in Latin; thus from amo, amai, was formed amavi ; from deleo.delei, dclevi ; from cupio y cupii, cupivi ; from audio, audii, audivi. From amo, amavo, we have amabo, from moneo, monebo. Perhaps this analogy may be carried to Plural Cases in bus. Thjs termination was formerly more extensive ; hence we find in Plautus audibo, Dibits, hibus, &c. Another formation of the Latin Future has been suggested ; — by the addition of fiovXou.ai or amo to the root of the Verb. Thus mnabo is an abbreviation of amare fiouXofxai, and regam of regere amo. Thus also in Italian from amare ho 3 1 have to love, is formed amerb ; and in French' from j'ai a aimer is formed faimerai. On the same principle the modern Greeks prefix QsAw or 0s to the Verb in the Future, as flsXcw y§a$£i or Qsygd^si. And the English Future will, originally tool, is the same as $ov\ for /3rj/,o/y,a/, and vol for tolo. 20Q Primitives of the Greek Language. The original form of Verbs, in the opinion of many learned etymologists, consists of two letters, the former denoting the Action, the latter the Person. From these Primitives, or radical elements, spreading out into all the ramifications of vowels and consonants significantly combined, was formed that copious variety of words, which distinguishes the most perfect of languages. The five simplest combinations are aw, sw, ico, oco, and vet). Of these the last letter denotes the Person, 1 and is changed into other letters to signify the different Persons, Numbers, Tenses, and Moods. The former will be found to indicate some of the principal functions of Naturei *Aco, signifies to breathe, to JIouk 3f Eco, to produce, to clothe, "lay, to send. "Oooy to hear. "Toy, to pour, to rain. 1 The First Person of the Active has the force, and the abbrevi- ated form of syoo; that of the Passive, of pj. The most simple change of the former into the latter formed the Middle Voice. Thus sco, I produce, 1 send into existence ; eep or sia;, J produce myself I send myself intp existence, or simply, J exist, I am. v Ew, I clothe ; &iu,c/A, I clothe myself. From the same principle the origin of the Passive Voice may be deduced. 2 D 210 After these Duads, the next combination consisted of Triads, formed by the addition of a Vowel, or a Gonso? nant prefixed or inserted. 1. A Vowel inserted: avco, to breathe ; Ida), to per- mit; \aco, to send; ilea, to bear, to think. 2. A Consonant prefixed : %da), to live ; hsco, to Nnd ; xla), to go; 7row, to drink; , to produce. 3. A Consonant inserted : ayco, to drive, to lead ; stia), to eat; 'Ixco, to come; opw, to excite; uSco, to Jlow. From these original combinations the formation of Verbs and their derivatives will be easily deduced. 1 Thus from ay a) are formed dyav, dydXka), dyi'kri, ay si pto, dyopd, ay pa, dyuia, &c. From |3aa> are formed J3a£a>, fidQog, @oitva), fiaiog, fiaKKa), he. From Uw come §iog, hsttia), dsiXog, 8s/a«>, Seo-pbg, SstrTrorTjs, Ssuw, 8i;£ojw,a/, Sot)Ao£, &c. 1 It is remarkable that the oriental Primitives generally end in Consonants. Thus from the Hebrew, AR, to flow, are derived Aur, light, dyg, ovga,vo$ t ogdw, of^a, aura, aurora, aurum. AT, to fly* Act, a bird of prey, dsro$. EL, to shine, eKr t , yj\io$, r y a<, ..;... irfi....... 97 First Aorist Active, «... 54 — — ■ Passive, .... 66 Middle, 70 First Future Active, .... 52 Passive,* » • • 67 Middle, .. 70 Formation of the Tenses, 51 Genders, 6 Genitive, Syntax of, » • » • 122 Iambics, • * * 160 "%/, to go, 89 "lyui, to send, * • • 90 212 INDEX. PAGE Imperfect Active, •♦•••. 52 — Passive, • • • • 64 Active in p, 81 . Passive, • • • • 84 Infinitive, Syntax of, • • • • 130 Ionic Dialect, • • • • 1 80 Irregular Nouns, • 15 Adjectives, • • 26 Verbs, 99 - Verbs in p, » • 87 "lo-r^i, 96 Letters, 95 1 Metres, 160 Middle Voice, • • 67 N, added, » • 4 Nominative and Verb, • • 117 Noun, 7 Numbers, 6 Numerals, 30 Participle, Syntax of, Parts of Speech, Passive Voice, Syntax of, • • • « Patronymics, « Perfect Active, - — Passive, ...... Middle, 134 6 57 129 17 54 65 69 PAGti Pluperfect Active, 55 Passive, • •■• • 66 Middle, *--• 70 Poetic Dialect, 184 Prepositions, 115 - Metrical, •• 144 Primitives, 209 Pronouns, 33 • Dialects of, • • 185 ' Prosody, 149 Relative, Syntax of, • • - • 120 Second Aorist Active, •• 55 Passive, • • 67 Middle, - • 70 • Active in p, 81 — Middle in yu, 86 Second Future Active, • • 57 ■ Passive, •• 67 , — . Middle,.. 70 Stops, • ••• 5 Substantive and Adjective, 118 Syntax, ...... 117 Trochaics, • 1&» Verbs, 36 in XI, 41 in MI, 76 Verbal-Nouns, 112 Vocative, • ••• .•• 11 Vowels, ...» 2 llontron : Printed by A, J. Falpy, XOOKE r S COURT, CHANCERY LANP, 1814. 223 Improved 'Editions of the following Books by the sante Author, may he had of the same Booksellers. THE ELEMENTS OF LATIN GRAMMAR; with Notes for the use of those, who have made some Progress in the Lan- guage. Tenth Edition. Price 5s. bound. DELECTUS SENTENTIARUM ET HISTORIARUM, Ad usum Tironum Accommodatus. Thirteenth Edition. 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This is reprinted from a, scarce tract in folio, 1795— Inquiry into the Etymology of" Peor'' — Biblical Criticism — On the Platonic Use of wS'jvivhv, as explained by II. Stephens, Ruhnken, Valckenaer, and Le Clerc — Heumannns De Summo Bon, — Arabian Anecdote — Analecta critica in Antholo- giam Gr&cam cura Supplemento Epigrammatum maximam Par- tem meditorum collegil Imm. G. Huschke — Classical Criticism — Carmina- Homerica, Ilias et Odyssea, a Rhapsodorum Interpolation- ibus repurgata, et in pristinam formam, qiiaterms recuperaiida esset, tam ex veterum monumentorum fide et auctoritate, quam ex anliqui sermonis Indole ac Ratione, redacta; cum Notis ac Prolegcm'enis, m qui.bus de eorum origine, auctore, et estate ; itemque de prisca maturitate, diligenter inquiritur, opera et studio Ricardi Payne Knight. Editio Secunda. This Edition, witlt many additions, is printed exclusively in The Class. Journ. A copy of the 1st edition, of which only 50 were printed, was lately sold by auction for above ll. — A Sketch of Modern and Ancient Geography for the use of Schools, by the Rev. S. Butler. — On the Republication of Casteli's /Ethiopia Lexicon — On the Repetition of certain Words ; applied to the Illustration of English, Latin, and Greek Writers, and of the New Testament — On a verse of iEschylus — Heliodorus burn a Christian, and not a Pagan — Cri- tical Remarks on Racine — Thesaurus Criticus Novus sive Syn- tagma Scriptionum philologicarum rariorum cevi recentioris, cum Indicibus locupletissimis — An Attempt to determine the Contro- versy about the Construction of Macte, and the Etymology of Equidem — Notarum Romanarum ac Literarum singularium cou- pendiique scriptionis in antiquis codicibus et monumeniis obvii Interpretatio, ex variis auctoribus collecta; — Notas Juris, a Ma- gone collects — The Number Seven — On the Study of the Chris- tian Fathers — An Essay on the Hebrew Points, and orrthe Inte- grity of the Hebrew Text — Classical Criticism — On Dr. Hales's ♦Chronology — Th.Chr. Hnrles De Nominibus Graecorum Libellus — On Mr. Boolhroyd's Edition of the Hebrew Bible — Question re- lative to the German Translation of Josephus — Winchester En- glish Prize Poena, Prometheus Desmotes — Adversariorum Criti- corum Specimen Antonii HaakmaTresling — Latin Poem — Obser- vationes in Euripidis Heraclidas et in Notas P. Elmsleii. No. 2 — ^Fragment of Longus; with Latin Translation — Remarks on Sir W. Drummond's " Essay concerning the Shield of Achilles"— ^Bib- 3 ical^ Criticism — Prologus in Adelphos, Fabulam ab alumnis Reg. j5cr?ol. VVestm. actam A. D. 1813 — Kpilogus — Euripuiis Supplices; Reeensuit Godofredus Hermannus — A Defence of Public Schools. No. 2 — Manuscripts, Classical, Biblical, and Biblico-Oriental, No. 3 — Literary Intelligence, Bibliography, c\:c. — Westminster Abbey,, by Mr. Maurice — Account of the Classical Works sold at Dr. Gos* set's Sale, with the Prices, and occasionally the Purchasers — Pro- spectuses of' New ]Vurks — Notes to Correspondents — Index to Vo»ls. yii. and viji. SCARCE TRACTS. THE PUBLISHED NUMBERS OF %\yt 'Classical journal Contain, among a variety of CLASSICAL, BIBLICAL, AND ORIENTAL, LITERATURE, THE FOLLOWING SCARCE AND VALUABLE GREEK, LATIN, AND ENGLISH TRACTS: I. Carmina Hoiwerica, Mas et Odyssea a rfiapsodortim interpola- tionibus repurgata, et in pristinam formam redacta ; cum notis ac trolegomenis, s/wdwRfCARDi Payne Knight. 2d edition, with very many additions. * # * A copy of the first Edit, (of which only a few copies were printed,) was lately sold by Auc- tion for vpwards of <£7. XI. A Chart of 10 Numerals in 200 Languages, with a Descriptive Essay. By the Rev. R. Patrick, Hull. III. Account of Herculaneum, By the Rev. Mr. Hayter. IV. An Introductory Essay on the Prepositions of the Greek Language. By Professor Moor. V. Bishop Pearson's minor Tracts chronologically arranged. VI. T. Falconer's two Letters On the Oxford Strabo. VII. De Grctcorum Verbis in Regula. flectendis ; a C. S. G. Haupt- mann. VIII. G. Canteri de rathne Emendandi Grcecos Auctores, Syntagma recens auctum. IX. Wasse On Latin Scholiasts. X. Oratio de Publicis Atheniensium Moribus, a Valckenaer. XI. Lamberti Bos regulcs praxipuce accentuum. XII. Ruhnken's Animadvv. in Xenophontis Memorabilia. XIII. Oratio de Lingua: Arabicce utilitate, antiquitate, et prastantia ; a Hyde. XIV. De Ludis privatis ac domesticis Veterum: a J. C. Bulengero. XV. Fontes quos Tacitus in tradendis rebus ante se gestis videatur se- quutus paucis indicat J. H. L. Meierotto, This is reprinted from a scarce tract in folio. 1795. *** The Proprietors of the Classical Journal have engaged a celebrated Scholar, resident in Paris, to give them a critical notice of books of consequence that appear on the Continent. The Seven First Vols, may be had, price 41. 4s. in boarcjs. Two Nos. to each Vol. 268 V*°-' ,, l< v ' i ' %**^P*V* \/^f>\,\** \ „0 •i j?-^ v •• *► o, **.T * AY -t^. . «b/ •fc « ^otffcA •l^r. *< °*. *.T _^ ^ v •4 cu '.• > 0-7 *, v *^* v • ^^ .« -w—%* Ay c» *:>»* ^'•\ ^.:itt./>* V\»aifr.% k^ v .MimST, >„^" .*AW/A"<> '^A ;^imts: -v : ^o< r of • * ^ "• \~ . t * *5 ** .1 ** ** • r *> *'"*