Greek Grammar Terms
Greek Grammar Terms
Greek Grammar Terms
William S. Annis
Scholiastae.org
February 5, 2012
Sometimes it would be nice to discuss grammar without having to drop back to our native
language, so Ive made a collection of Greek grammatical vocabulary. My primary source is E.
Dickeys Ancient Greek Scholarship. Over more than a millennium of literary scholarship in the
ancient world has resulted in a vast and somewhat redundant vocabulary for many corners of
grammar. Since my goal is to make it possible to produce Greek rather than to provide a guide to
ancient scholarship for which Dickeys book is the best guide I have left out a lot of duplicate
terminology. In general I tried to pick the word that appears to inspire the Latin, and thus the
modern, grammatical vocabulary. I also occasionally checked to see what Modern Greek uses for
a term.
Parts of Speech
The Greeks divided up the parts of speech a little differently, but for the most part weve inherited
their division.
part of speech
, noun
adjective (in ancient grammar considered a kind of noun)
, verb
, participle (which we now think of as part of the verb)
, article and also relative pronoun in the scholia
, pronoun
relative
demonstrative
possessive, i.e., , , .
, preposition
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Phonology
, word (in grammatical texts means many things, but it doesnt usually mean
word)
, syllable
, sound/letter
(-) vowel
consonant
Vowels may be:
breathings
rough ( to aspirate; to write with a rough breathing or aspirated consonant)
smooth ( write/pronounce with a smooth breathing or unaspirated consonant)
Theres an extensive taxonomy for consonants. The most important words are:
nominative (also, )
genitive
dative
accusative
vocative
ablative (in case you want to discuss Latin grammar)
to decline a noun
, declension
syntactic roles (from to act):
the subject
the object
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comparative
superlative
Verbs
Verbs have
, mood
indicative
imperative (lit., commanding)
optative
subjunctive
infinitive
, voice
, active, adj.
, passive, adj.
, middle, adj.
, person
first
second
third
, tense
present
past
imperfect
perfect
pluperfect
aorist (lit., indefinite, also used to describe a class of pronouns)
future
, conjugation
Verb conjugation is described by accenting except for the - verbs:
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transitive
intransitive
Dialects
Most often dialectical features are described with adverbs, but verb forms exist, too.
, , Attic
, , Aeolic
, ; , Ionic
, , Doric
Koine
, , the preposition is construed with the dative in Koine, but in the genitive elliptically in Attic.
Speaking Grammatically
Greek grammatical vocabulary was far more lush than what I have given here. In addition to this
vocabulary there are certain habits of syntax, as well as specialized uses of well-known words,
that are common in grammatical commentary.
Because ancient Greek didnt have quotes, a word or phrase under discussion is generally
brought into the grammar of the sentence by tacking onto it. So one may speak of ,
the verb . However a particular part of speech might take the article matching the term
for that part of speech, such as , the (preposition) . Since computers these days offer
both quotes and underlines you should mark off a word or phrase with more than just , to avoid
confusion. Letters and parts of words (such as inflectional endings) in the ancient commentaries
generally had an overline, but theres no reason not to indicate endings in the usual modern way,
with a leading dash. Finally, words under discussion usually have their accent in dictionary form.
Since many grammatical terms are nominalized adjectives, they will typically agree with
whatever grammatical term has been dropped. For example, words related to tense will often
agree with , though they may also agree with , the part of speech.
Just as in English, a full grammatical description of a word may result in quite the pile-up,
, no indicative, singular first person verb...
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Further Reading
By far the most important resource for people wanting to get a better understanding of how
the ancient Greeks themselves commented on difficult parts of, say, Pindar, is Eleanor Dickeys
Ancient Greek scholarship: a Guide to Finding, Reading, and Understanding Scholia, Commentaries, Lexica and Grammatical Treatises, from Their Beginnings to the Byzantine Period, Oxford University Press,
2007. Much of this summary comes from that book. However, one can easily find works of the
ancient grammarians themselves these days.
The grammarian Apollonius Dyscolus had a great influence on the study of grammar for
nearly two millennia.
A. Schmidhauser has the four surviving treatises available as text and pdfs at Apollonius
Works in Greek
Archive.org has the Maas edition of On Pronouns
Only one of Dionysius Thraxs works survive, The Grammatical Art, and thats not even surely
his.