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Luke 1-24
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John 1-7

Revision as of 10:13, 3 November 2020

My name is Nick. I am the Admin for this site.

This site is only in its infancy, so please contribute.

Lets promote God's Word together!

contact me - ausclix [@] gmail.com

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_alphabet

https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Wikitext_examples

Scriptures Containing template

http://users.skynet.be/hugocoolens/newurdu/newurdu.html

http://biblehub.com/sermons/authors/burgon.htm

http://biblehub.com/library/burgon/inspiration_and_interpretation/

http://biblehub.com/library/burgon/the_causes_of_the_corruption_of_the_traditional_text/index.html

http://biblehub.com/library/burgon/the_last_twelve_verses_of_the_gospel_according_to_s_mark_/index.html

http://www.lexilogos.com/keyboard/hebrew.htm

To work on

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%209&version=MEV;NKJV;KJV

=

  • For Greek until Christmas
  • 1) Make all Greek words in TR site - from 1 language transfer lesson a day.
  • 2) Do scriptures containing for all - in Greek and English (if possible)
  • 3) Listen to one language transfer a day.
  • 3) Δεν, den (see also Δε)


  • Complete Greek, Track 02 – Language Transfer
  • Teacher: The first word we will learn in Greek is, μένω – I stay or, I’m staying. Μένω
  • [méno].
  • Student: Μένω.
  • T: Μένω. So this is I stay or I’m staying. It covers both in Greek. You may have
  • noticed that two words are becoming one here. We don’t need to say the word
  • for “I” in Greek; that’s included in μένω. Actually, it’s that [o] (ω) on the end that’s
  • showing us that it’s “I” – I stay, I’m staying. So μένω is, I stay or I am staying.
  • You will notice that most Greek words are built of parts, and a lot of these parts
  • we already know them from English, although we may not realise that we know
  • them. For example, in English we have the word perimeter, we have the word
  • period, periphery – this “peri” that we have in perimeter, period, periphery,
  • means around or near, in Greek.
  • If we stick that to the beginning of μένω – so we said that μένω means I stay or
  • I’m staying – if we stick this “peri” to the beginning of that, firstly how would it
  • sound, if we stick peri (περι) to μένω [méno]?
  • S: Περιμένω [periméno].
  • T: Περιμένω, good. So περιμένω, “around stay”, means, I wait or, I’m waiting.
  • S: Περιμένω.
  • T: Περιμένω. So tell me again, what is, I stay or I’m staying?
  • S: Μένω.
  • T: Μένω, good. And, I wait or I’m waiting, or I’m around staying?
  • S: Περιμένω.
  • T: Περιμένω, good. The word for don’t or not in Greek is, δεν [dhen].
  • S: Δεν.
  • T: This is spelt with δέλτα [dhélta], the Greek letter that looks like a d (δ), or in
  • capitals it looks like a triangle (Δ). Δεν/δεν.
  • S: Δεν.
  • T: So this is like the TH sound in the English word “then”, like, I came then I saw him;
  • it’s the same sound. So in Greek, we’re writing this sound with the letter δέλτα
  • 10
  • (δ), which looks like a D/d, but we shouldn’t let that confuse us. We can just look
  • back to the English word, “then”, and import the sound right over into Greek. It’s
  • the same sound. So if you want to say, I don’t stay or, I’m not staying, you can just
  • put that first, that δεν [dhen] before the verb. So how would that be?
  • S: Δεν μένω [dhen méno].
  • T: Δεν μένω, good. And I’m not waiting or, I don’t wait?
  • S: Δεν περιμένω [dhen periméno].
  • T: Very good, δεν περιμένω.
  • This [o] sound with verbs, words like μένω, περιμένω, that shows us that it’s “I”, is
  • written with a letter that looks like a “w” when it’s small (ω), or something like a
  • rounded tophat in capitals (Ω). This is the letter ωμέγα [omégha]. You don’t have
  • to worry about remembering the letter names or even how the letters look. I’m
  • just mentioning them in case you are exposing yourself to written Greek.
  • In fact, vowels were not previously written in the script that became the Greek
  • and the Latin script, and [o] was adapted from “w” in English. So we see that
  • connection there with this letter in Greek that looks like a W and produces an [o]
  • sound – the letter, ωμέγα [omégha]. Ωμέγα. In other scripts, such as Arabic for
  • example, we also see this connection, where W and O is actually the same letter.
  • Arabic, Greek, Latin – the English script – they all come from the same root, they
  • all come from the same parent script. So this [o] sound like in μένω [méno] or
  • περιμένω [periméno], looks like a “w” in Greek. So give me again, I stay or, I‘m
  • staying.
  • S: Μένω.
  • T: Μένω, good. And I wait or, I’m waiting.
  • S: Περιμένω.
  • T: Περιμένω. So we see that this [o] or this w-letter shows us that it’s “I”. If we want
  • to make, He stays or, He is staying, She stays/she is staying, It stays/it is staying,
  • we change this [o] sound to an [i] sound, then we get the version of the verb
  • which works for he, she or it. How would that sound?
  • S: Μένει [méni].
  • T: Μένει, brilliant, μένει. So μένει gives us, he stays, he’s staying, she stays, she’s
  • staying or, it stays, it’s staying – all of that with μένει. He waits or, She waits?
  • S: Περιμένει [periméni].
  • 11
  • T: Περιμένει. She isn’t waiting?
  • S: Δεν περιμένει [dhen periméni].
  • T: Δεν περιμένει. Very good.
  • Now, if you want to make it a question – Is she waiting? Is he waiting? – we do
  • something that in English will form the question, we invert the “is” and the “he”:
  • She is waiting – Is she waiting? He is waiting – Is he waiting? But you don’t have to
  • worry about that in Greek. In Greek, all you need to do to make a question is
  • make it sound like a question. So, if you want to say, Is he waiting? Is she waiting?
  • how would that be?
  • S: Περιμένει; [periméni?].
  • T: That’s it. Περιμένει; Isn’t she waiting?
  • S: Δεν περιμένει; [dhen periméni?].
  • T: Δεν περιμένει; Good. The word for “me” in Greek is the same as in English; you
  • just pronounce it more like how it’s written, με [me]. Με.
  • S: Με.
  • T: So that’s “me”. If you want to say, He’s waiting for me, firstly we don’t need the
  • for, we will say something like, He’s awaiting me, She’s awaiting me, and that me,
  • that με [me], is going to come before the verb, it’s going to come first. So how
  • would you say that, He is waiting for me, She is waiting for me.
  • S: Με περιμένει [me periméni].
  • T: Very good, με περιμένει. She’s not waiting for me. So this με [me] wants to come
  • just before the verb. What will come first is the not. So, Not she is waiting for me/
  • he is waiting for me.
  • S: Δεν με περιμένει [dhen me periméni].
  • T: Very good, δεν με περιμένει. Isn’t she waiting for me? Isn’t he waiting for me?
  • S: Δεν με περιμένει; [dhen me periméni?].
  • T: Δεν με περιμένει; Well done.

https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5c69bfa4f4e531370e74fa44/t/5d03d32873f6f10001a364b5/1560531782855/COMPLETE+GREEK+-+Transcripts_LT.pdf

== Mark when checked 1900, 2016 (2020), Beza:

Matthew 1:1-10; Done

Check Strong's in one verse Matthew 1:1 > Done

Match 2020, 1611, 1769.

Put into Matthew 1 all English, Greek, German, Latin, all TR, manuscripts etc... then Matthew 2

http://textusreceptusbibles.com/Home/Parallel

http://www.bibles-online.net/1557/NewTestament/1-Matthew/

== Do 10 per day:

KJV Marginal notes. From 1

Strong's numbers / Greek From 1

Scriptures Containing From 1

1 Chapter in 2020. Psalm / Proverb.

Proof 1 Chapter in 2020. Matthew 1 ->

Do one of the 191

Write out a list of variants like Textual Key.

Do one Papyrus

Do one Minuscule

Do one Hebrew Strong's

Do one Uncial

Do one Latin mss.

2021

Checked in online TR 2016, TRB site**Not really needed - override it. (will need to be sent updated Excel, and with 2020 print (notes to editors).

Matthew 1-28

Mark 1-16

Luke 1-24

John 1-7

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