This ideal textbook for the intermediate Greek classroom examines two features of the Greek verb: voice and mood. Drawing on his years of teaching experience at a leading seminary, David Mathewson examines these two important topics in Greek grammar in light of modern linguistics, especially Systemic Functional Linguistics, and offers fresh insights. The book goes beyond the typical treatment of voice and mood in modern-day Greek grammars and is illustrated with numerous examples from the Greek New Testament.
This is the first volume in a new series on Greek grammar edited by Stanley E. Porter of McMaster Divinity College. Series volumes offer short, linguistically informed introductions to key concepts in the study of New Testament Greek.
208 pages.
Contents
Series Preface
Introduction
Part 1: Voice
1. Recent Scholarship on Voice
2. Linguistic Model and Voice
3. The Three Voices in New Testament Greek
Part 2: Mood
4. Recent Scholarship and Linguistic Insights on Mood
5. The Greek Mood System
6. Infinitives and Participles
Conclusion
Indexes
Voice and Mood: A Linguistic Approach is in the following collections: