Is there any way to link A Parsing Guide to the Gk NT and the text of NA28 UBS or to any critical apparatus?
mm.
I actually don't own the parsing guide because I don't see the need for it since parsing is provided with the NA28 text itself. I just set it to hover so it parses the word on the fly when I hover over the word with my mouse but I assume you know that.
I also assume you know that you can hover over the NA28 apparatus symbol in the text itself (see below). So, given these things, why one would want to access the parsing guide alongside NA28?
I have the resource mm as it came as part of an expansion collection I own. Unfortunately it is not index by bible verses and so there is no way to link it to a bible, I tried using it with cited by tool and it didn't work either as I had suspected it would not. The resource has not been updated since 2014 by the looks of it. For the reasons Bruce outlined I suspect it will not be high on the priority list to be updated with bible indexing added to the resource as you can access the parsing information form the Greek New Testament itself, unless of course you are using a non morphologically tagged text. Personally I think if they are selling this resource is should be updated to be fully featured.
Is there any way to link A Parsing Guide to the Gk NT and the text of NA28 UBS or to any critical apparatus? mm.
Personally I think if they are selling this resource is should be updated to be fully featured.
I agree but I still don't understand why someone would want/need it given that the information is readily available within Logos.
Just returned the book for a refund. Totally forgot about the NA28...
The parsing guide was a very helpful book...in 1971. [;)]
LOL. So I was doing my own parsing all along. Took sometime, but that's the fun of doing original language studies. Now I can "cheat" and let the NA28 do that for me.
I wonder what my Gk prof would think about this?
Thanks again.
Just returned the book for a refund. Totally forgot about the NA28... The parsing guide was a very helpful book...in 1971.
The parsing guide was a very helpful book...in 1971.
LOL. So I was doing my own parsing all along. Took sometime, but that's the fun of doing original language studies. Now I can "cheat" and let the NA28 do that for me. I wonder what my Gk prof would think about this? Thanks again. mm. Just returned the book for a refund. Totally forgot about the NA28... The parsing guide was a very helpful book...in 1971.
When I was first learning Greek I very much appreciated the Readers Greek English Lexicon by Sakae Kubo which was cutting edge when it was published in 1975. It was a great tool to help me develop my Greek reading skills.
https://www.amazon.com/Readers-Greek-English-Testament-Zondervan-Reference/dp/031052332X/ref=la_B001H6QK6E_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1532820539&sr=1-1
Personally I think if they are selling this resource is should be updated to be fully featured. I agree but I still don't understand why someone would want/need it given that the information is readily available within Logos.
I don't either, but FL have included in a collection(s) and so pushing it to users who might want other resources in those collections and so they should make it functional at least...or remove it from those collections when they are revised for Logos 8 as it is not required in this day and age.
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