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Prep for 2nd Year

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
Absolute   A construction detached grammatically from the main clause of its sentence but modifying the main clause.  
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Adjectival   Functioning like an adjective or similar modifier, i.e. to modify a noun or other substantive.  
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Adverbial   Functioning like an adverb or similar modifier, i.e. to modify a verb. For example, the adverbial use of the participle, when a participle is dependent upon and modifies a main verb.  
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Agent   The individual or thing responsible for performing an action. With an active voice verb, the agent is usually the grammatical subject of the verb. In English, with a passive voice verb the agent is often the one referred to with the word 'by'.  
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Anarthrous   Without the article.  
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Apodosis   The 'then' or consequence clause of a conditional construction, or the independent clause in a sentence which has a conditional-like clause.  
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Apposition   A semantic relationship whereby one item defines another. Distinguished from epexegetical by expressing a relationship for nouns.  
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Arthrous   With the article.  
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Articular   With the article.  
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Aspect (verbal)   A semantic category which governs verb tense-form usage in Greek. A language user chooses to view an action as occurring in a particular way and then selects one of the established verb tense-forms of Greek to convey that meaning.  
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Asyndeton   A construction in which clauses are joined without the use of connecting particles or conjunctions.  
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Attributive   Refers to a syntactical structure whereby a quality or attribute is considered part of what another item is by nature. This is normally reflected syntactically by the attribute falling within the range of the substantive and its article.  
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Auxiliary (verb)   A verb such as eimi which helps another verb, such as a participle, to form a complete verbal unit. Auxiliary verbs are necessary in periphrastic verbal constructions.  
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Case   The use of different forms of a given substantive to show its relations with other words and its roles in basic sentence structure. Greek has nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive and dative cases.  
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Clause   A complete grammatical construction consisting of one or more phrases.  
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Complement   The element which completes a predicate. The complement is often equated with the object of a verb.  
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Completive   Any element which can complete another element. E.g. an object is the completive of a verb; objects of prepositions are completives.  
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Conjugation   The display of forms of a verb.  
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Conjunction   A word that joins other words or clauses, either a 'coordinating conjunction' (and, but, or) or a 'subordinating conjunction' (while, since, as, if, although).  
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Consequential   Describing an action that comes about as a consequence of another, or as an expected result.  
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Constative   A label given to particular verbs or uses of verb tenses (often the aorist) which are said to treat a given action in its entirety or as a whole, from start to finish.  
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Declension   Pattern of various forms of a given substantive indicating gender, number and case.  
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Definite Article   A word modifying a substantive and defining it as particular or unique, 'the'.  
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Deliberative   Referring to thought, consideration or intention.  
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Demonstrative   Words such as 'this, that, these, those'. They are used to point out or indicate particular persons or things being referred to.  
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Enclitic   Descriptive of a small group of words that rely upon the preceding word for their accent. Among enclitic words are the indefinite pronoun, forms of the verb eimi and various particles.  
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Epexegetic   A semantic relationship whereby one item (a word, phrase or even clause) defines another.  
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Finite Verb   Has a subject.  
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Gnomic   Term characterising an event as continuous or recurring over the course of time; normally refers to processes of nature.  
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Hortatory   Characterised by language designed to direct, incite or encourage.  
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Imperfective   A verbal aspect used to describe an action as in progress; expressed by the present and imperfect tenses in Greek.  
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Inceptive   Expressing the beginning of an action.  
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Inferential   Pointing to a logical conclusion to be drawn from another action.  
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Infinitive   embodies the verbal idea in the form of a noun; a verbal noun  
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Inflection   the sets of endings which languages such as Greek attach to their words to distinguish various semantic and syntactical categories and relations  
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Ingressive   expressing the beginning of an action  
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Instrumental   expressing or indicating the means or agent by which an action is accomplished  
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Intransitive   refers to verbs which make complete sense without requiring an object or complement  
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Iterative   expressing repetition of an action  
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Modal   related to mood  
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Mood   the label given to the forms used to indicate the speaker's view of an action's relation to reality - indicative, subjunctive, imperative, optative  
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Number   the distinction in both substantives and verbs between singular and plural  
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Paradigm   a model or pattern, often used to refer to the list of inflected forms of a given morphological category such as a verb or substantive  
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Participle   embodies the verbal idea in the form of an adjective; a verbal adjective  
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Particle   an indeclinable word with grammatical and relational meaning. Prepositions, conjunctions and adverbs  
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Partitive   describing the function of a word or phrase which refers to a part of a larger whole. 'some of the people' uses 'some' partitively  
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Perfective   a verbal aspect used to describe an action as whole or complete; expressed by the aorist verb tense in Greek  
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Periphrastic   (1) describing a verbal construction consisting of the auxiliary verb eimi in its various forms and a participle in appropriate grammatical relation. (2) describing any means by which one statement may be used as a substitute for another  
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Person   a quality of verbs which indicates that the subject is the speaker (1st p), the person spoken to (2nd p) or another person or thing spoken about (3rd p).  
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Phrase   a group of words forming a syntactical unit which may constitute a subject, predicate, complement, and the like. A phrase may consist of only one word.  
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Postpositive   not occurring in first position in a sentence or phrase.  
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Predicate   (1) a structure whereby a quality or attribute is given to another item (2) the functional name for the verbal part of a clause, consisting of a verb phrase  
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Preposition   a word belonging to a group of particles often used to aid the cases in their function by joining a noun phrase to other words in a clause.  
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Proleptic   referring or looking to the future  
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Protasis   the 'if' or supposition clause of a conditional ('if-then') construction, or the dependent clause in a sentence which has conditional-like clause.  
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Punctiliar   expressing momentary or point-like action.  
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Purpose   the intention behind or reason for another action. Purpose often overlaps with result, because to intend an action can mean that something comes about as a result.  
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Relative Pronoun   a pronoun serving to link a subordinate clause to a substantive (implied or expressed). 'The person WHO wrote this...'  
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Result   the results or consequences of another action. Result often overlaps with purpose, becase to bring about a result can mean that an action was intended.  
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Sentence   a syntactical unit consisting of one or more clauses, at least one of them an independent clause.  
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Subordination   the grammatical means by which dependent relations especially between clauses are indicated.  
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Substantive   a term given to any word which may be used like a noun. For example, in Greek, participles, infinitives and especially adjectives, besides nouns, are often used as substantives.  
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Syntax   a grammatical category concerned with the order of words, phrases and other elements, and the meaning relationships they enter into.  
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Telic   describing the intention behind or reason for another action.  
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Transitive   transitive verbs require direct objects to make complete sense.  
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Voice   a semantic category used to describe the relation of the agent to its action. Voice indicates whehter the subject is acting or being acted upon. Active, Middle, Passive  
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Volitive   describes a wish; a volitive is a mild form of command.  
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