a copious greek grammar vol. 1

809

Upload: gennaro-massa

Post on 04-Jun-2018

242 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

been
given
only
kind
of
subject,
were
Henry
Stephens,
and
has been pursued
down
by
before its
the
construction
by
some
expressions
that
which
connects
not
done
it,
because
of
a
shortly
be
published*),
Greek
authors
critically
the
as
in
a
Latin
one:
that
it
should
full
language,
as
far
as
valuable Aniiuad-
estimable
is
neither
complete
in
real
Scholar.
indiscriminately,
usage
single
not merely
Xe-
nophon,
and
other
authors,
but
no
remarks
left
to
view of
explanation and
deduction could
several peculiarities,
enumeration
of
the
radical
have,
however,
throughout
gone
upon
the
a comparison
F.
A.
Wolf
and
Hermann
in
Germany,
as
essential
to
and
and
habitual
train
of
thought
speech
to them
MS.
authority
as
ori-
remarks
here
made
belong
to
predecessors.
The
that
at
the date
was
nearly
the
Iliad
^
Ursinus,
and
a
History,
being
himself
a
Dorian
consequently
usages
His dialect
is cer-
*
This
observation
is
not
very
accurate.
He
should
have
said,
that
Aristophanes,
writing
comedy,
vised
idiomatic peculiarity
the language of
opeere,
opeei.
opeere,
Ibid.
Obs.
There
in
preceding word, it
because it
superable
objections :
1st,
that
be
aorist from etw or
e/c?;aa (from kcw) into eKrja,
P.
4. 5.
the
old
aor.
2.
but
anomalous
forms
Other terminations
of adverbs
without
the
article
article.
P.
ing
Dawes's M. C.
kuI
irrepa ttoki'u. Buhle
oVep
Id.
P. 830. 1. 5 from bottom. There seems to be
an
ellipsis
of
iavrop,
ad Hecub.
788. whose
instances
deserve
particularnotice
fxerov
which must
comic
writers
the same
that
only
not
Anacreon;
of
the
respect, as
we observe
by the
dialect. In
tone
is
After-
rhetoric,
intelli-
also
of
fo-
reigners),
a
Bentley
Opusc.
Philol.
p.
380.
247.
Koen
observations
on
language
made
the
text-book
of
their
pre-
about
1430,
Grammar,
Mediol.
1476,
who is
London
1746.
vol.
2.
the
doc-
trine
Svo,
is
an
excrescence
of
this
me-
thod
work
is
Godofr.
Pars
i.
Lips.
1801,
des Homerischen
later
thnes,
and
6th
Athenian
ancient
times,
{<yvi.i(p(i)va),
and
7
Math.
the
long,
e.
g.
Evander
Evai/-
SjOOG,
write
avroc,
not
{spirit
case in
Inscription,
and
time of
olc,.
Backh.
pepvxwpeva,
tenuis, 'Arpevs*
(to distinguish it
MSS.
and
tliough
they
sometimes
substituted
ft
y
v
for
it
; tlie
the
diganmia,
which
Dial,
so
oKa
for
ore
Kev,
and
okku,
/crj/ca
Attic
by
the
fre-
evpe7a,
evperi,
a.\{]9eLa, a\r]6r]'ir]. The Attics observed a mean
between
the
two
verbs
in
aivoj
the
Ionic
7j,
ear?';/np'a,
epiriva,
Pindar.
So
in
the
E^o-y.
Attics said
Kpio^o),
i
for
e
remained
particu-
larly
in
the
^Eolic
were
both
in
common
use.
Obs.
This
interchange
by
Herodotus
J
Koen
ad
Greg.
p.
(274)
585.
' BceckhadPind.P.
12,24.
Reisig
Fisch.
p.
98.
ad
forms
mentioned
above
are
the
for k€v6s
repetition
or
the
insertion
of
the
vowel
long
one,
as
in
contraction
TeXeoq
in
n.
2.
p.
for
ITjjXeiSTjc
The Attics,
separate vowels
into diphthongs.
g.
 
^
0,
e.
g.
fivaaoc,
and
s,
and
said
t,;
e.
g.
Trcpi^de'iaacxa
are
assimilated
for
Ka'i(l)oc,
=^LobeckandErfiirdtadSoph.Aj.
§.
and
Theocr.
softer
Bappeiu
old
Attic
TTVKvoc,
for
metre ;
as
used
and
Homer
has
11,
23.
Is
this
the
digamma
transpositions
of
the
p
are
quantity of the
than
accent,
a
(aticipites)
nature,
as
well
  Apes
11.
hidfxeXe'iari
firjyiv
cnroenrajy
11.
t
final
Ocl.
connected
^
Mar.
Lex.
Soph.
v.
^apos.
Draco
Strat,
p.
35.
92.)
may
be
accounted
for
xXry/i/juvpts
have
v
in
the
epic
poets,
v
generally
irvpos,
(j)o'iyi^,
xo«'''^>
Eur.
Hec.78.
Ale.
and Aristophanes,
not in
407.)
^Jwaeic
avTrji,
TOVTOvi,
tovtivi,
is
evident
ap(5poToc,
tX,
e.
g.
721.
1401.1441.
in
one
syllable
formed
by
the
confluence
of
two
consonants,
e.
g.
in
-rrpayiiia
the
with
declension,
re-
quires
a
transposition,
e.
g.
KopaJ^,
KopaKec,
/Lo^vwvy
p.r)(Ti. TTvp,
5,
8.
final syllable.
the
§.29.
i)
toov
e/nuju
aBrjQ
Tiv
T. 298. Only
the verb
following.
e^rj,
the
sense
from
the
preceding
word,
a.
proparo.iyt.
or
jjroperisp.
o/iJjXt^
This
is
called
indinalio
toui,
these words
enclitics
occur
also
in
composition
with
without
the
its
force,
the
accent
''
p.
70.
p.
therefore
to
stand,
the
acute
of
syllable
to
the
penult,
e.
g.
would
be
e.
g.
^.
is
a
which they have
Well.
(282)
601.
(293
seq.)
619.
p.
249
seq.
words
stand
togedier,
of the
first word
is rejected,
pro-
bably
829. Horn.
p'la)^,
e7ra(pr}
TTuvaic,.
when
a
single
o-
follows,
the
aiTOG,
Kaftuivm'
o/.t
Hence kut-
p.
18sqq.
Elmslcy
Arist.
Ach.
35.
in
Aristo-
sylhible
to
which
it
is
appended,
lengthen
a
syllable
strengthen
g.
TruvTealyn'
Od.
|3',
lengthens the short
they
allow
to
remain
in
other
similar
places.
There
pause, just as
The V which is added
to a
limitation.
In
of
unquestionable
au-
thority
in
Homer
as
well
as
afiat.
Apoll.
tt.
dyrwv.
p.
;
Obs. 3.
all
assume
this
y,
can
hardly
be
admitted
for
which
of
an
also by
vowels over which the
are
the
most
923.
certain rule
Kara,
fxera,
napa,
clfxa,
particles dXXa,
ye,
wore,
most
commonly
p.
ore (Plato, however,
Generally the elision
will
hardly
be
6,
65.
and
in
-compound
3)
without example.
be
used,
to
elided
; where
Med. 4:21 .
et,
e.
g.
TrXeii',
Moeris,
Arist. Pint. 589.
contracted
because eis
is formed
^,
;
Soph. Aj.753.
long a the
fio'i,
ao'i,
used
as
enclitics
for
oti'o^ooc Eurip.
So also
on rj,
>;.
o
for Kat
e.
g.
xvwo
and
elsewhere.
1st
TTovoio.
Comp.
Od.
0'
93.
the
dead.'
should
not
Comp.
€L,i(7ropjj(Taif
the
main
proposition,
there
should
be
subscribed
which
prevails
in
the
flourishing
state
only once
in a
1404. (where
a
proper names
names just
in the ace.
and other
the
Attic,
depfir],
vapKr},
paroxytones,
eiJKXeir],
Karr;-
^etj;
the gen.
and dat.
//.
were
remained
and
the
epic
poets
in
our
lyric passages^.
the
vowel
preceding,
poets
only,
chiefly
the
tragedians
-oo (analogous
Thessalian dialect.
in
Attic,
e.
g.
(piXos
see
of
substantives
in
Xayo's.
EXAMPLE.
Singular.
Nom.
o
oy-yeXoc
iiy(jM
TraTijp
TTCirepos
of the
535.
Xiftas,
xlpvifios,
Ki'TipCs,
KpTj-n-rs,
ftaXiSi
oc,
and
others,
have
the voc,
termination
of
the
no-
minative,
and
are
e
Brjptov.
The
dative
plural
appears
TroX'iecr-ai, iTrTnjetr-cri^. Nf/yoet-
^ecr-ai Find. Isthm.
When
the
Attics,
veKvamv
Od.
X',
568.
alyec
a'lyeai
plural
ces,
or
to be
>;^eta, rervipujs
rerv<pvla.
the
ac-
^Xe/3ef,
(pXeftus.
The
terminations
take the accent in the
gen.
and
dat.
sing,
on
ace.
plur. on the penult and antepenult, iiy^pa, ciy^pes, I'ly^pas.
duyarpa,
OvyciTpes
wy,
monosyllabic
by
con-
traction,
e.
g.
^p
(from
tap)
^pos,
3,
Obs. 4. The iEolians in the genitive and vocative omit
s, e.
the sake of
the metre Av.
regular
contraction
yevee {MS. ap.
H.
Gr.
Attic, aoreos
Voc.
occurs
oi^vl.
de
Vcnat.
2,
5.
6,
2.
10,
2.
ad
II.
a,
p.
50,
18.
and
Comp.
Markl.
ad
15,
93.
v'licn
belongs
observations
of
the
old
grammarians
Kvefas,
yprfi,
rats ypavai, tus
and
plur.
and
the
genitive
plur.
Plat.
Thecet.
p.
276
B.
occur;
in
/3ws,
accus.
(ywy.
latter
Zopv,
gen.
Tov
yovyaros
{II.
<p'
, 591.)
and
yovvos
{II.
.^^wtZr.
893.
and
frequently*)
1603,
570.)
gen.
^ovpwv
{II.
X,
243.)
dat.
lohpaai
vary
from
the
nomina-
tive,
which
is
alone
in
use,
so
that
to
explain
their
formation
it
is
necessary
at
X'lec, Xleai, X'leacn^.
Abuiidantia.
These
14.
p.
Homer;
from
the
former
^aKpvoic
Dorians
lengthened
the
terminations
a
and
r;
masc.
the
nominative
arises
from
an
ob-
lique
§.
which
is
;
vteTq, wt'ewv,
vieai (in
these,
oueipov
''AjO»jv,
{Hemsterh. ad
Porsonad
Phcen.
134.
950.)
as
,
after the third,
vocative,
e.
g.
ad
Phryn.
p.
4o3
seq.
133.
T\epar]v.
Herod.
8,
124.
Atheuceus
from
Aristoph.
Vesp.
510.
Lob.
b
Valck,
ad
Eur.
Ph.
p.
306.
in Hesiod.
sing,
Cyr.
Gr.
except
some,
in
which
Straho
7,
'
Attics
j
by
plural
which one
But
the
following,
which
are
jn
KiQapiarnc,
KiOapiarpia
av-
Xriritc
AiOio-
TTiaaa^.
Aristophanes
has
had,
besides,
the
form
rip
into
eipa,
e.
g.
aufTijp
for
-oiSric,
from
riavOooc,
-Oovc.
in
Theocritus
25,
193.
is
from
Avyeias,
Avyei-
100.
-tovicrjs,
and
uovuitri's,
Phid.
rijth.
3,
1.
9,
50.=*
101.
Patronymics
of
the
nations:
1)
laQ
and
t'c.
Attics contracted
Nj,|opgwv
a
before
the
termination
oc,
e.
g.
young
tX^ttOK,
is
used
where
the
primitive
\b
feminine.)
e.g.
veaviaKoc,
avOpojiriaKoc,
lost the
from
Ai»-
Kia
Hence
also
'l9aKi]aioc. Others end
those
gentilia
per
names
g,
viz.
'ApKaSia, Opdl^
e.
g.
TTjj-yaToc,
others,
as
ap-
yaXeoQ
(piXiKoc,
TjOwSjjq,
rifv
rjZovfiv
v(j)pvx',
Eu7'ip.
Hcc.
33Q.
Heracl.
1039.
Time.
2,
11.
irXeovas.
4,
in Homer
kpijfxovs.
Bacch.
842.
y^pvaeov
rarely contracted
4,
rpofijs
id.
4,
83.
rv^pai'Ti
D.
TiKJyOeicTi,
g.
The re-
same
preceding
syllable
short,
consequently
^<yj<^,
nor
lable long,
of
vyiwrepos in Sophron for
The
true
reading
is
the
Attics,
'Fisch.S.p.
oTTiVw,
oTTto-raTor,
in
Homer.
produced
comparatives
and
superlatives
not a
trace of
made to assume
contradiction in supposing that forms of
com-
XwcTToc Plat.
(Ed.
C.
xp'
varepoc,
[QvTara (see Eust.
(in
Herodotus
ovBefxit},
2,
13.
p.
(76)181.
The
X',
431.
Sotouc
II.
V
140.
01.
1,
128.
in Call.
Deviations
from
the
above
rule
are :
e'lKocn
Kal
kirra
Herod.
8,
1.
^iaj(JXioi
2000,
&c.
/.ivpioi
10,000.
Obs.
twos'.
et/cocrt
reas
Xenoph.
Cyrop.
voh',
as /I']sch. Prom.
and
ufifj.es,
which
is
also
Homeric //.
\p',
said a/xt
calls
lEoWc,
occurs
II.
the
iEolic
TWUTOU, TWUTW,
ee
Antima-
chus
and
Corinna''.
rrcjxSiv
rarely
as
a
genders for
avrovs, avras,
Eur. Hipp.
;
and
accus.
sing,
and
the
car'
efx
avTov
written
separately
in
Homer,
efx
(Ed. C. 951
vlSpiae
older editions,
the 3rd
Doric
dialect
II.
4 ',
414.
0',
ajj-fjierepos.
vuerepoc,
oSt, 17S1,
rolcr-
^effi
to, rj,
relative
o
as
demonstrative,
which
in
e.
g.
plur.
oriva
II.
than
the
Latin,
or
the
verb
action
{middle,
p.
fxkaov).
Verbs
of
the
second
kind
designate
only
a
amongst
these
the
verbs
vowel a,
e, o,
and
the
 
and
antiquity.
This
famiUar to
the
sub-
probability
withother
The
been
d.eniedLhy
Vorson,
Prcef.
Hec.
p.
Comp.
Matth.
more bold to
the
following
begins
Soph.
messengers.
The
passage
in
the
Hecuba
\p.
€Kares
ov
ov
\p.
Kavovd
perf.
2.
oi
and
^.
because the
verb is
(see
§.19
is
^pefx(i)f
TeOpavarai
we-
TrXrjya.
eicrKe/cv/cXjjKrev
(TVTo, yiiTo,
Od.
/3',
249.
KeKuSuJv,
icopeaa. since the sense
augment
blow',
this
change
scriptions
(e.
g.
the
Sandwich
Athens
the
augment,
e.
g.
o^va-
e(7iBi]po(popei
compounded
from
evavrtoq.
In
this,
however,
usage
p.
217
eSiyrr^ffa (v.
double
augment
avopQoh),
characteristic,
which
is
found
TTpd^M
by
lengthening
the
termination
act.
pass,
and
mid.,
the
fut.
The
in
from eveyKw is
174.
future;
the
first,
Payne Knight,
(p.
21.
note
explaining
the rest
the second,
do
this
exclusively
jSa^w
all
rarely
into use.
the r;
1,
112.
aivriaeiv,
in
the
aorist
always
aivqaa,
e
ge-
nerally
the
These
futures
are
first
declension,
§.68.
On the other hand,
Triopai
intransitive,
or
at
least
occur
frequently
pen-
ult
is
again
made
long,
except
at/oo),
which
makes
ripa
ai in the
in the
presuppose
either
a
fut.
in
eiXo-^a Demosth.
Kf^j/j-jj,)'*
or with
are found
in
writers
wrote
sometimes
g.
from
TreTropai
from
ttuw.
heZiaKa,
P/aton.
Phad.
59.
in
Herodotus
comes
MSS.
Laert.
8,
85.
Thus
eXvylx^^
from
another,
but
differ
essentially
(i^^)
2. act. pass, and
made
by
rejecting
o-
in
the
y^^^)
-ew
fut. 2. [^rptoyeio, Tpa-
of
the
fut.
(in
KpvftSa
the
<J)
was
necessarily
changed
into
ft
on
account
penult, it
changed
as
connected
with
apfiyu).
Conip.
euphony, or
from
d7rr]yye\r]y
1.
and
old
Attic
§.
-/xt the
for ye-ywve
came, by
Xen.
CyrojJ.
4,
5,
17.
The
other
found
in
Lacedaemonians
Thuc.
5,
79.
Hence
313. vid.
to
afxapToifiL
the
Horn. H.
in Cer.
they
resembled
the
persons
of
'iaTYifxi,
o-.
c)
Optative
Jth.
1,
the
plusquam
perf.,
which
occurs
in
Homer
and
Herodotus,
person
-ee,
e.
g.
tyeyoiee,
inro-
(leftijKee,
see
from
Aristarcluis
Etym.
M.
^j.
419,
used
also
in
the
more
fi
^Eolians
the
true
Twv.
p.
379
A.
quotes
voies
for
Trotets
is Kal
made
short
by
Em-
QeoiaLv^.
Note,
In
contraction
the
Dorians
apdoi^iai.
and
especially
from
reOvafxev,
and 'iBpevai (after
in Attic.
So from
f.ikiJLvr](raL
and -drat,
Lijs.
253.
Tluis
also
XeXvro
as
optat.
Od.
been appended,
in
barytone
verbs
a
third
{airiKaro
4,
140.
&c.
is
the
plusquam
pcrf.
optative of
3,
2. like the
e.
g.
eyeirao
II.
e,
880.
V7re-
29,
18.
Thus
in
whilst
others
have
the
contracted
form
eeiao),
as
4,
28.
and
the
Scholiast
on
Comp.
and
flexed
others,
e.
g.
(^nfu
from
0aw.
If
vowel, or
syl-
lable,
in
-tu.
Bijaojuai,
cttjj-
aofxai,
Bujaofxai,
SoKret,
according
not
the
perf. the augment
e^oOrjv. In
in StSw/ta.
Vesp. 421.
preceding
it,
nOe'i/iiriv
edit, in Plat.
at
least
more
riOcvai,
of
the
measure
of
the
verse.
It
analogy
was
always
carefully
attended
a(j)e(Tav, more
2,
see
Dorvill.
adCharit.
p.
of 'itj/jli
plusq.
Demosth.
p.
258,
§.
often
a,
e.
g.
TiOearcu
§.
 
cpaai{v).
Ionic
writers.
cpdaOe
for
e(p.
Od.
I',
200.
Imperat.
(pdo
&c.
is
the
Ionic
^'J
g.
cpaicu
tov
'EibJKoarr],
irapet, ^vyei,
and
Aristophanes.
4.
The
h',
321.
which
Homer
has
whole
being
first
con-
parts are afterwards
KecpaXat.
Soph.
^aav,
eaofiai
)7^tej'.
I'/^tevca
950.
old
pres.
'id),
b)
ijeiTe,
yeaav
(not
j'/'tcra)'),
readiness
manner
of
verbs,
and
hence
they
are
called
by
way
(as
some essential
essential
tenses
: the
the
different
dialects,
which
were
of
all
these
kinds.
I.
The
radical
syllable
was
lengthened
by
changed into
e'xw,
evcTrw,
tiktu)
from
reKit).
uKllyrji-u,
change
of
cipal
syllable,
the
first
syllable
having
sufiered
(whence
-WO),
e.
g.
ireravvvui,
^eiKvvd),
f.iiyvv(jo,
from
caiu),
Trerad),
^eiK(t),
fxlyo).
If the penult
of the radical
The
change
(rropeo).
Tliese
in -vv(o II.
aor.
2.,
e.
g.
t/c/-
cct/cXt;,
aKKrjvai,
most
easily
found
do not
it is
as an
account
of
the
aor.
2.
rjyayov,
-nyayofxriv,
§.
1,
5,
with redup.
567.
aXeue
9
9 .
elsewhere
aXwffai,
epic writers.
aXiTeiv, aor.
Ion.
1422.
TjAaro,
aXaro
Theocr.
Hence
aor.
2.
kfxapreiv,
aor.
1.
pass,
rifxap-
rrjOrjv^.
probably
inserted
for
euphony.
See
gr. e^aTraCJiiov
and
imperf.
The
remaining
tenses
are
sup-
apeaOe'iriv
Soph.
Antig.
500.
(dpitpcKa
perf.
1.
by
some
derived
render
favourable,
satisfied',
it
agrees
in apaavrec,
Kara. 6v-
Here.
101.
infin.
(a/niLievai)
Hesiod.'^py.
512. 514
aw is found
perf.
new
present
forms :
^aaKe
in
(idoK
'lOi
Soph.
(Ed.
C.
II. v'
pass.
(dpcoOijcopai
from
jSpoM.
Callim.
II.
//.
fut. /Stwao/tai Plat.
tenses
are
derived:
fut.
^XaaTrjcro)
only in
in the
125.
^la-
l.pass.
a token
of welcome.
a lengthened
epic form
AEIQ
or
Biw
BeBievai, part.
edprji'),
as
Eurip.
Hec.
807.
Br.
in Herod.
present, and
in the
same sense,
(see note
as
otSafiev
Herod.
2,
17.
9,
6',
writers. For
eoiKa the
dialect
first
syllable
lengthened
after
the
KoXeo-wS.
if the
makes
'to
mortify,
to
reprimand',
which
(as ea-oXa from
einariiQnv,
or,
wliich
is
more
Attic,
VTTiaTTjdrjv
analogous
to
the
also
has
imperf.
elrcov,
e.
g
^leiTTo/nev
11.
;
frequently met
commonly
eS)/Sa
//. p',
g.
IJippocr.
T.
2.
p.
^.
in
the
compound
vn-Kryve-
never
requires
this
form,
and
Eur.
in violation
of the
in
p.
202.
Ag.
1250.
Elmsl.
from
ei'Sw),
-l.
Schnci-
in
a
manner
which
diflers
pass.
KeyXa^a furnishes
375. 3rd
aor.
1 .
eKvaa,
Kvae
II.
t,
, 474.
,
fut.
kv-
and Xa^ijSaVw:
Homer
and
Herodotus,
but
II.
Cer.
289.
M.
aorist
efxaaaafiriv,
perf.
p.
This
remark
sometimes
ap-
plies
infin. ovivavai
e.
g.
Herod.
1,
68.
2,
64.
7,
208.
mostly
trans-
itive
Od.^',
712.
Od.
0',
539.
wpope
BeioQ
aoiBoa
oacppofxai.
aor. 2.
re-
TrXo/nevoG in
preposition
vpo.
^
''
pass
(iXyo; and
sense,
e.
g.
Arist.
Av.
1350.
Homer
has
is found
Eur. Thes.
after the
aor.
2.
p.
ep-
long*^.
piovvvfxi
was
formed
as
from
a
verb
afiriaai,
from
the
radical
word
a/xdoj,
Ion.
afxkh)^,
(3rd
pers.
plur.
erXav
s
Pors.
ad
§.
in the
For
rerevyerov
the
3rd
re^o) Od. X
oc
sense
is
^e^naoixai.
p.
p.
1123,
19.
derives
(eveiKe^uev
and the Attic writers^, fut.
p.
olaOriaoiaai
m'eiKa
yapi^aw
-yavBtj (see
aht^pvKTiy
dy^pic,
avTiKpvc,, avOic
the neuter
The
e/ce?
removal
from
a
place,
in
answer
to
the
questions,
whither?
whence?
(r),
©///Bycri
other
ovda/LiT},
-a,
also
altered according
cumstance
of
continuance,
or
Try
oJoc,
ttoioc,
ottoioc,
toioc,
yet'.
Elsewhere
it
constitutes
the
first
are
compared
adverbs
which
proposition in
BoaQ
C7rt
vrjaQ
The
article
'A^cArji.
demonstr.
/3',
275.
Compare
y
378.
o
Among the Attic writers the tragedians on the whole kept
most
closely
to
quently
any one
good, any good
both
the
subject
and
remark
also
generally
holds
good.
otiier hand
vvv yperepov
tu
juera
ravra.
Sometimes
it
e.
g.
JEur.
Hel.
ola.
Plat.
Phadon.
p.
i) kot aydpu)7roy
t^eeiv
a
pronoun,
refers
to
some-
, 55.
326.^
OavTec
used in
CEd. C,
o
poi
according to
definite
article
where
in
594.
Heracl.
981
seq.
Herod.
5,
70.
i.e.
aiTiot-
pevoi
avTovQ
tnreKaXovv
touc
only
that
the

Exceptions
Soph. Aj,
Koi.
rafia
Katceivwy
487.
TrpovaKe-ipcifxrju
rovpuv
re
koX
TovF,
where,
however,
rovSe
may
-w
tovs
\6yovs
pi)
p.
405
D.
tov
bpoKeXev-
Bov
Kal
El.
1351.
olai.v
justice'. Very different is
avajKoia
distinguished
from
the
par-
XoyoQ
Vjuuv
or
in
eXenrer
Kara
to»^
definition o(
with it
5,
irei-
Protag.p.356C,
for
On
the
other
I'rjec
al
iraaai
KarappvTOv.
But
avrou
vi'ifxatriy
(japv-
ra
airofiXeipac, av, to
ri
avTTJ
ravry
av
e(^>f
o
M.iV(i)C
epe,
kut
eKeivrju
ttV
'Ofxnpov,
to
Xe-yojuevoi',
to
Se
l-ieyiaTov,
see
adverb,
and
Twv
aXieojv,
on
OaXarTOvpyoi
ovrec
oiJ.ioc,
ovk
UKVovaiv
dirocpaivecrOai
-rrepl
rrjc,
yrjc;
\,
i-eKT})fii]v
tovto
fxei
e\eLV
another
g.
Time.
7,73
extr.
Kai
1
fikv
etirovres
fxev
another
the
relative
pronoun
ovs
fxiy
Karayojy.
Comp.
J).
fiepeiov^.
We
Se
*
to^
rijuvcreie
ttoAic
Tlpia-
/uoio
;
to avoid
use
from
that
is
often
used,
and
both
Greek
the
plural
is
often
Prom.
67.
(Tu
o
av
vaAa
TOKevaiv
word, but
Hence also
Eur. Iph.
to
one
of
the
plurals
implied
in
the
verb,
nearly
as
608. So
Eurip. Hipp.
for
191.
p.
248.
Heind.
ad
Plat.
Gorg.
ft.
403.