εἰμί in autenrieth georg 1891 a homeric dictionary for schools and colleges new york.
Country attic greek word.
Ancient greek was a pluricentric language divided into many dialects the main dialect groups are attic and ionic aeolic arcadocypriot and doric many of them with several subdivisions some dialects are found in standardized literary forms used in literature while others are attested only in inscriptions.
Poet you are betraying your country.
ποιητής nom ποιητά voc 3.
εἶμαι eîmai modern greek.
There are also several historical forms.
Shortening the stem of 3rd declension.
The word zeta is the ancestor of zed the name of the latin letter z in commonwealth english.
If a masculine and feminine stem ends in a consonant other than ν ρ or ς the stem drops its final consonants until the word.
For example an initial s sound before vowels in greek evolved into h as in cf.
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εἰμί in liddell scott 1940 a greek english lexicon oxford.
It was given a new name on the pattern of beta eta and theta.
English six latin sex greek heks written ἕξ cf.
The word corresponding to seven is written ἑπτά cf.
So little composition is attempted nowadays outside the range of attic that i have refrained from introducing words and phrases that belong to other dialects.
Preface the english greek lexicon here presented contains features which i trust will render it acceptable both to teachers and to learnersthe vocabulary has been compiled from attic authors of the best period.
είμαι eímai references.
Captain steersman pilot navigator figurative guide leader synonym.
In ancient greek all nouns are classified according to grammatical gender masculine feminine are used in a number singular dual or plural according to their function in a sentence their form changes to one of the five cases nominative vocative accusative genitive or dative the set of forms that a noun will take for each case and number is determined by the declension that it.
Words of the same origin are often disguised because of changes that have taken place in both languages.
εἰμί in liddell scott 1889 an intermediate greek english lexicon new york.
Unlike the other greek letters this letter did not take its name from the phoenician letter from which it was derived.