APPENDIX To the Revision of The New Testament in the Original Greek Corrections were made to the hundreds of typos
found in the Public Domain Text by Butch Walker, Computer Technician for
the Modern Literal Version New Testament Committee.
Break down to change text to the symbol font
used in Windows for a Greek look without accents:
Revelation has some unknown comments after the VAR: which are: ac, ib, kd, rmd. Changed to ALL CAPS to avoid someone thinking they are Greek words. (I don’t have a clue the meaning.) {space} 0 {space} – These are words NOT
originally in the Strong’s System which was based on the Textus Receptus
but are given a Strong’s number in which both the Strong’s number and the
‘NOT originally in Strong’s word‘ have the same single common root or base
word.
0 0643 = 1980a [1]
Problem Wording: M 5, M 6 CHANGED TO: M5 M6 (Marginal Readings... we presume.) Other problem wording just left alone: END OR OMIT < > | : Verb numbers 5627 - 5772 were removed. If you need those numbers you do NOT need to be using this text. Greek is for the New Testament Bible Scholar not the Bible student or beginner. ====================================================================
THE ONLINE GREEK NEW TESTAMENT
Derived, compared and corrected from the Bagster "Analytical Greek Lexicon," with comparison made against Perschbacher's "New Analytical Greek Lexicon" Abbreviated in a form similar to that found in Friberg's "Analytical Greek New Testament" Maurice A. Robinson
The codes which follow reflect an original abridgment and correction of the data presented in "The Analytical Greek Lexicon" (London: Samuel Bagster and Sons, 1859). Comparison also has been made against the revised updating of that lexicon by Wesley J. Perschbacher in his "The New Analytical Greek Lexicon" (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1990). The Perschbacher revision failed to adjust over 500 parsing or declensional errors in the original Bagster edition; these now have been corrected. The abbreviation system was developed independently.
Its features are similar to those in Timothy and Barbara Friberg "The Analytical
Greek New Testament" (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1981), and can be used readily
by anyone familiar with the Bagster lexicon, Perschbacher, or
Many Greek New Testament non-verbal forms (nouns, adjectives, conjunctions, prepositions, and particles) can be interpreted in more than one way. The declensions presented reflect a normal interpretation of those forms which actually occur in the Greek New Testament. Every NT occurrence is covered, and the declensions reflect the totality of Greek NT non-verbal forms. The data presented are not claimed to be free
from error; the editor may be notified of any problem regarding the parsing,
declension, or Strong's number assigned to any word, at
UNDECLINED FORMS: ADV = ADVerb or adverb and
particle combined
DECLINED FORMS: All follow the order: prefix-case-number-gender-(suffix) Prefixes: N- = Noun
Cases (5-case system only): -N = Nominative
Number: Gender: S = Singular
M = Masculine
Suffixes: -S = Superlative (used primarily
with adjectives and some adverbs)
: addition from March 21, 1996 (parsing.txt)
1) V-tense-voice-mood
The abbreviations which pertain to each of
these categories are the following:
Tense: P
= Present
Voice: A
= Active
Mood: I
= Indicative
Extra: -M
= Middle significance
Person: 1, 2, 3 = First, Second, Third person Number: S, P = Singular, Plural Gender: M, F, N = Masculine, Feminine, Neuter Case: N
= Nominative (5-case system only!)
:addition from July 27th document: SPECIAL NOTE: the so-called "Second" forms of the Aorist, Future, Perfect and Pluperfect are respectively designated as 2A, 2F, 2P and 2L, preceding the voice and mood designations. Functionally, these forms are equivalent to the undesignated (First) Aorist, Future, Perfect, and Pluperfect forms. :end:
STRONG'S NUMBERS: To access the lexical root form definition of any Greek word, the appropriate Strong's concordance number immediately follows each Greek word. The definition then can be obtained by the normal routine for definitions as used for English texts. The Strong's numbers used for the Greek New Testament do NOT always coincide with those used in the English texts. Strong clearly assisted the lay reader of the Authorized Version by assigning numbers to each unique root word form; however, he also attempted further to aid the reader by subdividing some root forms into separately numbered entries. The result of such subdivision can be seen in the multiple forms of the verb "to be" (each of which ultimately derives from Strong's 1510). The same policy of separate numerical entries also was applied to various comparative and superlative forms of some adjectives and adverbs, as well as to the adverbial use of some noun forms. Conversely, rather than treating each word
separately (as would have been proper for anyone able to read the Greek),
Strong assigned a single unique number to certain multiple-word
Thus, the Strong's numbers -- well-suited as they may be for the lay reader of the English text -- in places become confusing and detrimental to those reading the Greek New Testament who would use those numbers when searching for or classifying the ultimate lexical root forms of various Greek words. The present Greek edition attempts to alter
Strong's Greek word numbers so that they relate directly to their ultimate
practical root form. For example, all forms of the irregular second aorist
In some cases, new words exist within the Koine Greek text that had not appeared in the Textus Receptus upon which Strong's numbering system had been based. In such cases, the new word is located either under a relatively appropriate Strong's number, or has been assigned a Strong's number that otherwise would no longer exist, due to consolidation under the root lexical forms. One case in particular is that of "ekperissou" and "ekperisswv," neither of which exist separately in the TR: these have been assigned the (otherwise now vacant) Strong's number 4055, thus retaining a single common root, and that in close relation to other words containing some form of "periss-". The revision of the Strong's numbers within
the Greek NT text is an ongoing process. Ultimately all Strong's numbers
in the Greek text will agree with the Greek lexical root form.
ADDITIONAL NOTES: It is ASSUMED that all Strong's numbers are correct; these have not been verified, although a few errors have been noted and corrected. Declined proper nouns are not specifically identified as being names of persons or places; only indeclinable forms are so identified. Reflexive pronouns have the Person (1,2,3)
attached, e.g. F-3DSF
:From July 27 document: THE VARIOUS FORMS OF THE VERB "TO BE": Although the analytical lexicons state no voice for the various forms of "to be" (including compound verbs in which "-eimi" is an element), for the purposes of the current parsing data ALL such forms are considered to be in the ACTIVE voice. In addition, Strong's Concordance gives unique numbers to many separate forms of the verb "to be", even though all these properly derive from "eimi" (1510) alone. Perschbacher gives both numbers: the particular Strong's number in the left margin and the root number 1510 in the right margin. In the present electronic Greek NT texts, ALL forms of "eimi" reflect the single number 1510. Since accents and breathings are not provided in these Greek texts, some word forms will appear identical although possessing distinct parsings or declensions. The following specifically should be noted: The form "h" occurs infrequently as part of the verb "to be" (V-PAS-3S of 1510, numbered 5600 by Strong); the same form reflecting the definite article (3588), relative pronoun (3739), and disjunctive particle (2228, 2229) dominates within the Greek NT. The form "ei" also occurs infrequently as part of the verb "to be" (V-PAI-2S of 1510, numbered 1488 by Strong); the same form (in the absence of accents and breathings) occurs most frequently as a conditional particle (1487). The form "hn" is frequent as a verb form in the Greek NT (V-IAI-3S of 1510, numbered 2258 by Strong); it also occurs frequently as a relative pronoun (3739). The subjunctive verb form "wsin" (V-PAS-3P of 1510) is incorrectly cited by Strong as participial (5607). Note also that the same form may be a plural noun from 3775. The verb form "hv" can be either a present subjunctive (PAS-2S, Strong 1510) or an imperfect indicative (V-IAI-2S, Strong 2229). Both forms derive from the root 1510; the parsing information following each form makes the distinction clear. :end: -end of file-
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