THE CAMBRIDGE GREEK LEXICON

Any plans to have this in LOGOS?
THE CAMBRIDGE GREEK LEXICON
P A
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Make this a suggestion.
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P A said:
Added comment to Feedback: Logos Book Requests: Cambridge Greek Lexicon that has 3 votes
Caveat: new Feedback needs a separate login so please vote => Add the feedback website to the Faithlife SSO system that has 26 votes.
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Is this work important for Koine Greek?
Meanwhile, Jesus kept on growing wiser and more mature, and in favor with God and his fellow man.
International Standard Version. (2011). (Lk 2:52). Yorba Linda, CA: ISV Foundation.
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Beloved Amodeo said:
Is this work important for Koine Greek?
"... covers the most widely read ancient literary texts, from Homer to the Hellenistic poets, the later historians, and the New Testament Gospels and Acts of the Apostles"
I guess (?) not Paul or Peter. Nor James.
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I read that too and then began to question how important this work would be for biblical work. Then I saw a representative page from the tome and really became concerned... hereDMB said:Beloved Amodeo said:Is this work important for Koine Greek?
"... covers the most widely read ancient literary texts, from Homer to the Hellenistic poets, the later historians, and the New Testament Gospels and Acts of the Apostles"
I guess (?) not Paul or Peter. Nor James.
Meanwhile, Jesus kept on growing wiser and more mature, and in favor with God and his fellow man.
International Standard Version. (2011). (Lk 2:52). Yorba Linda, CA: ISV Foundation.
MacBook Pro MacOS Sequoia 15.3.2 1TB SSD
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Beloved Amodeo said:
really became concerned
I can see where the structure of the lexicon might be helpful. But eventually, you'd need to see the 'textual context' (how's that for form-mixing!). I'm still digesting my Cambridge Greek (classical) Grammar.
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Information about the Cambridge Greek Lexicon:
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DMB said:Beloved Amodeo said:
Is this work important for Koine Greek?
"... covers the most widely read ancient literary texts, from Homer to the Hellenistic poets, the later historians, and the New Testament Gospels and Acts of the Apostles"
I guess (?) not Paul or Peter. Nor James.
Unless you’re saying that those parts of the NT were written in Greek other than koine, I suspect that’s just a description in the blurb.
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Verbum Max0 -
A review by Dirk Jongkind... http://evangelicaltextualcriticism.blogspot.com/2021/04/cambridge-greek-lexicon-4-do-we-need-it.html
Meanwhile, Jesus kept on growing wiser and more mature, and in favor with God and his fellow man.
International Standard Version. (2011). (Lk 2:52). Yorba Linda, CA: ISV Foundation.
MacBook Pro MacOS Sequoia 15.3.2 1TB SSD
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Thanks for posting this! If it comes outs soon, I haven't decided, but I AM intrigued.
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David Wanat said:
Unless you’re saying that those parts of the NT were written in Greek other than koine, I suspect that’s just a description in the blurb.
Per Beloved's link above, indeed the Cambridge greek clock stopped ticking at Acts. Not just the blurb.
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Yes this is a must-have in Logos. Any updates on this?
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There are so. many. good. works by Cambridge University Press. Logos has very few of them. This should be the next big publisher they work hard to license works from.
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Beloved Amodeo said:
A review by Dirk Jongkind... http://evangelicaltextualcriticism.blogspot.com/2021/04/cambridge-greek-lexicon-4-do-we-need-it.html
Very helpful. Thanks.
Pastor, North Park Baptist Church
Bridgeport, CT USA
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