τὸ ἄρχειν πόνον φέρει.
Future inf attic greek.
It is used mainly to express acts.
An experiment with perseus new vocabulary tool.
Mastering these first three principal parts is sufficient for most reading purposes at the beginning and intermediate levels.
Advanced vocabulary lists and lexica give six principal parts for greek verbs.
This verb is made more complex by the fact that in attic greek that is the dialect of most of the major classical authors the present tense apart from the indicative mood imperfect tense and future are usually replaced by parts of the irregular verb εἶμι eîmi i will go.
The first is to use the accusative and infinitive construction where the subject of the indirect statement is put in the accusative case and the verb in the infinitive mood.
μέλλω inf has future meaning right from homeric greek.
General conditional with reference to the present.
Should x happen then y would within the group of general conditionals greek distinguishes two types.
The indicative of εἶμι eîmi is generally used with future significance in the classical period i will go but the other parts such as the infinitive ἰέναι iénai to go are not future.
The ancient greek infinitive is a non finite verb form sometimes called a verb mood with no endings for person or number but it is unlike in modern english inflected for tense and voice for a general introduction in the grammatical formation and the morphology of the ancient greek infinitive see here and for further information see these tables.
Attic greek is the greek dialect of the ancient city state of athens of the ancient dialects it is the most similar to later greek and is the standard form of the language that is studied in ancient greek language courses attic greek is sometimes included in the ionic dialect together attic and ionic are the primary influences on modern greek.
This happens quite often in patristic writings and it is good to keep this quote handy from donald j.
List of principal parts by unit through unit 19 for mastronarde s introduction to attic greek first three only i e present future aorist.
The fourth principal part is the perfect active.
Mastronarde s book introduction to attic greek.
The narrator speaker considers fulfilment of the condition possible but not more than that.
A list of words that covers 90 of tokens in a collection of attic prose texts from the perseus corpus.
The infinitive takes on a different use if an article is found in front of it.
In classical greek μέλλω is primarily followed by a pres inf or a future inf and the periphrasis does not express the distinction between imperfective and perfective future.
Present future and aorist.
Vocabulary entries for verbs in a greek dictionary are listed alphabetically by the form of the 1st person singular present indicative active e g.
Because adding σ to the verb stem can result in some unexpected forms vocabulary entries also normally include the 1st person singular future indicative active as well.
We have already encountered the first three principal parts.
There are two ways of doing indirect statements in greek.
So called future less vivid.