Pfl 367 .07 Copy 1 'VPKf; r £■ is vi^ W^ m^ ''%\>i, H ^ ■| '^^^v ' ^ ^'S yt^ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. 8 .07 i I UXITED STATES OF AMERICA. | THE ELEMENTS OF GREEK SYNTAX, COMPILED FOR THE USE OF HIS PUPILS, BY THE V REV. WILLIAM ALEXANDER OSBORNE, M.A. OF TRINITY COLLKGE, CAMBRIDGE, AMD HEAD MASTER OF THE MACCLE5FULD FREE GRAMMAR SCHOOL. DIVIDE ET IMPERA.' MACCLESFIELD: PRINTED BY J. SWINNERTON, MARKET PLACE. ^^ PREFACE. Had the old Eton Grammar been in use in the Macclesfield Free Grammar School when I was appointed to its mas- tership, in 1837, I should probably have been contented to continue it, with some few additions to its rules. But the respect for old associations, by which I should have then been influenced, can scarcely be demanded for a work so compa- ratively new as Dr. Valpy's ; and it has appeared to me, after two years' experience, that the paucity of rules in the text, and the difFuseness of the notes, are alike puzzling to the young student, while the absence of any continuous ar- rangement renders the book less valuable to the more ad- vanced scholar. This opinion has, on several occasions, been strengthened by those of Examiners, (men of the highest standing in both Universities,) who have stated their convic- tion of the difficulty, not to say impossibility, of inculcating a sound knowledge of Greek construction upon this basis. I have sought for a Grammar which might supply this deficiency, but with little success ; for the better works on this subject, while professedly written for schools and col- leges, are generally too diffuse for the one, and too meagre for the other. I have, therefore, compiled this short Treatise for the use of my own scholars, and, in so doing, I have de- rived most valuable assistance from Edwards' Abridgment IV of Matthioe's Greek Grammar, a work which I should have adopted in my School, had I not considered it as much too copious for young minds and memories, as Valpy's is too scanty and deficient. Contrary to ordinary custom, I have given but few examples, that the memory of the pupil may not be over- burdened, and that the work (if it hereafter should grow into a Grammar) may be small in size, and cheap in price, two great desiderata for elementary school-books. Macclesfield, November, 1839. SYNTAX, I—THE ARTICLE. 1. The Article agrees with the Noun in Gender, Num- ber, and Case, and is used when a particular object is spoken of, as 6 iWoj, the horse ; but is omitted when the object is indefinite, as IWo? or tWoj Tig, a horse, 2. The Article with the Infinitive is used for a Substan- tive in every case, as To (^poveivf understanding, row (ppoviiv, &c. 3. The Article with the Participle may be construed as the Relative with the Verb, as 01 TTOiovvTsg ravTu, those who do this, 4. The Article with jxsv and . Se is used as a Pronoun, as 'O jt^si/, the one, 6 hs, the other. (1) 5. The Article is often joined with an Adverb or part of a sentence, persons or things being understood, as Oi TreXag, Neighbours; 01 TTsp] ApyiloLiLov, The companions of Archidamus, (2) With a Genitive it signifies property and relation, as To. nXoLToivos, The works of Plato. (l)^The Article is used in Homer for the Demonstrative Pronoun, as b yhp ^\0e, For' this man came; and so also the Relative, in Plato and later writers, as ^ 8' 05, Said he. (2) This expression sometimes includes the person himself, as ol irepl Qpaffi' $ov\ov, Thrasybulus with his companions. 6 II.— THE ADJECTIVE. 1. The Adjective agrees with its Substantive, in Gender, Number, and Case, as XpYjo-Tog uvY}p ea-Ti xoivov ayot^ov, A good man is a public benefit. {V) 2. The Adjective sometimes agrees in Gender w^ith a word implied, as ^i\s rexvov, dear childf tfou being implied. 3. The Adjective is often put in the Neuter Gender, when in English the word " thing" would be supplied, as Ho) u7rejh rwu tlp-riixivcov. Akin to what has been said. 18 V — Datives also follow Passive Verbs, as iZsTTo/rjTat fioi. I have done it. THE ACCUSATIVE. I — 1. The Accusative follows Verbs Transitive, and de- notes the object of an action, as *Ayci7rSv tivol. To love any one. 2. The Accusative of the object follows Verbs signifying any feeling or emotion of the mind, as TepaivsTui sTrieix^s. The man seems well-behaved. This Rule holds good also after an Infinitive, if the same subject is referred to, as Ueia-ca slvai Seo-TroT*)^ I will prove that I am master. (1) Hence the Adverbial use of the Accusative, as /car' apxh'^, At the he- ginning; ii.pxhv, Atjirst. 15 II. — I . The Infinitive is sometimes used elliptically for the Imperative, 6s\e, wish, or •^iy.vr^a-o, remember, being un- derstood, as A\\v a(,KTTs6iiv KM uTTsipo^ov sfxfjisvai uKXoov. Be always foremost in valour and excel others. 2. The Infinitive is also used absolutely where h(Tri or gfeoTi may be supplied, as 'fli t-jtoc sIttsTv. So to speak, 'lis SIM'S /As/xv^(r5ai. As far as I recollect. Or without coj, as Ou TToXXcL Koyoo sIttsIv. To speak briefly. 3. Infinitives with or without an Article are used in the place of the Latin gerunds and supines, as Asysiv Ixavoj. Capable of speaking. 'I^slv ovx. ula^po§. Not unpleasing to look at. Ill 1. Participles are used in the place of the Infini- tive with Verbs signifying, to desist or persevere, or an affec- tion of the mind, as *Ayu%cov jx? hdTsKii. He continues to love me. 2. So Participles are used with Substantive Verbs and others, where the Verb only adds an Adverbial sense to the Participle, as Tot Xoyov (Tou Qoivf/^ua-ag s^oo. I still admire your argument. " EXah TouTO tiowiv. He did this privily. But the Participle is sometimes redundant, as XoDX-poufii Tvy^uvsi cro<$oj ouv. Socrates is wise, IV I. Verbal Adjectives in tso^ govern the same Case as the Verbs from which they are derived, and may be ex- plained by hi with the Infinitive, as 'Eni^viJiYiTeov Icrriv slprjVYjg for dsl iTTiSujxeTv. Men ought to desire peace. Unless they are used Passively, as 06 (T^i TTspjoTTTs*) 6(7Tiv r} 'EWoig. Greccc must not be overlooked by them. — (Herod.) 16 2. Verbal Substantives also take the Case of their themes, as Tdv (Toov ' HpoLxKsl Ivipri^oLTwv. Your gifts to J^ercules, CONSTRUCTION OF CONJUNCTIONS. I — 1. Two or more Negatives strengthen the nega- tion, as TaXXcx, ouSevj ovtoi^ri otJSa/xwj ovosf^lav Koivcovlav e^et. The other things have no connexion with any one, any where, in any way. (1) 2. Myi is used and not ov v^^henever the sense is indefinite or the truth of one proposition depends on that of the other, as ^0X6* QVK a^iov elvai ?^v, (h jOojSev (xerep^g* a.-jrwv. It seems that he deserves not to live who partakes not at all of them. — (Plato.) Hence also fti^, not ou, is used in prohibitions, v^^ith either the Present Imperative or the Aorist Subjunctive. 3. Ou fj,v} is used for the Future, with the 1st Aor. Subj. Passive, or the 2nd Aor. Middle and Active. II. — 1. "Av with the Indicative gives the force of a Sub- junctiv(\ 2. With the Imperfect signifies frequency or custom. 3. With the Optative or Subjunctive implies a conditional meaning. 4. Is used also with Infinitives and Participles where these may easily be resolved into the simple Verb. 2. Compounds of av or Particles joined with it most fre- quently take the Subjunctive, as lav or t^v, eoog olv, sTreav, gTreiSav, x«v, OTroVav, OTrco? av, "npiv civ, co^ av. But these also occasionally take the Optative, as also all In- terrogative Particles joined with av, as ttwj av, I wish that, &c. III. — 1. El is used with the Indicative when the relation (1) Two Negatives of the same kind sometimes cancel one another. 17 between the condition and its consequence is actual and positive, as El ha-Tiv oixoj, ovx Snro^YjfjLsl. If he is at home, he is not abroad. Or in actions which are either past or passing, as El ^(Tuv ocycuQo), oux, civ tuvtu eTruG-^ov, If they were goody they would not have been suffering these things. (1) 2. El (and oxrirep oiv si) is used with the Optative when a thing is merely possible or probable, but totally uncertain. Or when time is signified or a past action frequently re- peated, as E\ hTV')(piiv TKTi, his(^svyov uvrovq. If they met with any^ they always avoided them. 3. EI is used with the Subjunctive, when a question is asked, whether a thing should be, as * E^pyjcrTYipioc^ovTO, si uvsXcjot/tui rot ouvof/^ciTu. They inquired if they should adopt the names. So 61, e» yap, sTOe are used with the Optative for a wish, or when the wish relates to anything past with an Aorist or Im- perfect Indicative. IV. — Foip, 8e, and jxsv can never be placed first in a sentence. V. — Particles of time, Ittsj, eTreiS^, ore, ottots are joined with an Optative ;when a past action is spoken of; but they are compounded with av and take a Subjunctive ^when the action is present or future. 2. "Axpis o3, 60);, jxep^pij ov take an Imperfect or Aorist (1) El is used with a Present or Future Indicative when a thing is spoken of, as positively happening, as Et 8e TeAeuT^cet rhv fiiov eS, oKfiios KeK\rja-6ai &^ios iffri. 2. With the Indicative of a Past Tense where the consequence is still present, as Oij Ke Oav6vTi irep 5S' aKaxoifxriy E( /U6Tct 015 erdpoiai ddfirf. I should not now grieve, if he had been slain. 18 Indicative^ when a past action lasted; only to a time already past, as nlvei eoog e^epfjiYiv auTov, He drinks till he has warmed himself. They take an Optative after a past action, but a Subjunctive after a present one. 3. np)v is similarly constructed, but takes an Infinitive when a future action is only conceived in thought. VI.— I'/va, cog, ju,^, (1) and occasionally oTrcog are used with the Indicative of a past tense of actions which should have happened/ but have not, or after a wish concerning something supposed to be past, as Tl QUK Bpfi^* e/xauT^v — onoog aTn^XXayyjv. Wh2/ have I not thrown myself down, that I may have been freed ? They are used also with the Future Indicative, expressing a states that continues .or will happen at an indefinite time; or with an Aorist Subjunctive expressing a transient state at once concluded. 2. "Ivu, o(ppoc, oTTMs and cog take the Optative after Verbs of past time, and the Subjunctive after Verbs of present and future. (2) VII — 1. "On and cog are used with the Indicative after Verbs signifying to know, or any affection of the mind, as FvooQi OTi lycti ocKfi^Yi Xsycjo. Know that I speak the truth, 2. But they take an Optative with or without «v whien a fact or statement is quoted in a narrative ; and this is some- times interchanged with an Infinitive by an Anacoluthon. (3) 3. "fla-Ts is generally followed by an Infinitive, but occa- sionally by an Indicative or Optative. (1) M^ always signifies " whether" with the Indicative Present, (2) When both are used, the Optative implies an action possible or desirable, the Subjunctive one depending on the will of the subject, as in Herod, ix. 51. (3J oi/x '6ti, fi^ '6ti, and ovx '^irots are used to express " not only" and " not only not," as the Latin non modo, ipca or Kfyu or some such word being under- stood. 19 PREPOSITIONS, I Governing One Case only. 1. Prepositions governing the Genitive. Equivalent in Latin. 2. 'Atto 3. 'Ex 4. Upo 1. '£v 2. Xvv Radical sense. Usage. for, instead of. from, equivalent to removal selection priority, or preference. after, (in time) owing to, by- out of, or from, in consequence of, by, or through. before, on account of. pro. a, ab. e, ex. coram or prae. 2. Prepositions governing the Dative only. in with abL rest or abiding, accompaniment m, or among. by means of. with, by means of. cum. 3. Prepositions governing the Accusative only. 1. E\i' motion into, or to, , in with ace. with respect to, ' for, until, (with time) about, (with nume- rals.) * 'CIS is used for m with names of persons, as 'n$ ^/le, To me. 20 Case. II — Governing Two Cases. Radical Sense. Usage, Latin. 1. 'AvoL Dative on super, with (In the Poets only.) abl. Accusative continuance up, through, upon, or in, against. per. * at the rate of. 2. Ai^. Genitive throughout or through, per. distance in, at a distance of. before. prae. Accusative throughout or through, per. duration on account of. propter. 3. Kar^. (1) Genitive direction or at, or against. contra. downward mo- down from. de. tion Accusative relation according to. secundum or as respects. quod attinet agreeing with. ad. on account of. in, during. about. 4. 'Tiilp. Genitive. substitution for, or instead of. pro; j or on account of. 1 superiority above, over. super. Accusative extension over, or beyond. super or su- against. pra. ( I) Karh. is also used distributively like the Latin Singulus, as Kaff '- ^ ^■^ i?yi ■^ ^f^^:- -M^- SNJ^?. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 003 036 285 8 •