How can I find all of the times in a particular Bible, where the greek words ου μη immediately precede a verb in the aorist tense and subjunctive mood? Thanks!
Open the morphological search and set the target to the NA-27 then enter
lemma:οὐ BEFORE 1 WORD lemma:μή BEFORE 1 WORD @VA?S
Thanks for the reply George. This doesn't work for me??
I don't understand why not. I copied the entry I gave you and pasted it into a morph search and got 226 hits (number seems wrong since it should be divisible by 3) in 68 verses.
Not just Greek...he's a master at math as well!
Not a master, but I did take algebra, geometry, triginometry and calculus.
You're right, it works. I forgot to select the Greek text instead of English. Can you explain why this doesn't work with an English Bible that has a reverse interlinear? Thanks again.
Never mind. I forgot about the word order in Greek vs. English. Don't laugh too hard!!
Lankford, don't mention Interlinear around George. I might not offer you any more help. [:D]
triginometry
Since I know how important correct language is to you, would you be so kind as to direct me to a dictionary that lists that spelling, so that I can incorporate it into my vocabulary?
fgh ... you're having too much fun.
triginometry Since I know how important correct language is to you, would you be so kind as to direct me to a dictionary that lists that spelling, so that I can incorporate it into my vocabulary?
Mea culpa ! The word signifies three angles (τρεῖς, τρια -- γωνία) and should therefore be trigonometry.
You're quite right I do! But after catching George doing several language mistakes in the last few days, while simultaneously attacking another user for doing the same, I figured it was time to call him out. That it was a Greek word was an extra bonus. [:D]
Mea culpa !
Tua culpa indeed! How is a poor foreigner like me supposed to learn correct English if I can't even trust yours? [:(] What, then, about:
a palate to mark up texts
Would that by any chance be palette?
(As it happens, I found that one in a reply to the very same person, whom -- about two hours later, and in the very same thread -- you offered to buy a dictionary because you found his misspellings "painful".)
Also, you might want to know that a MAC is not the same thing as a Mac. I hate to be the one to break this to you -- I can only imagine how it will make you feel -- but, if I've understood things correctly, even your PC has a MAC.
Writing MAC instead of Mac in a forum read by Mac users is a bit like walking out on the street in a t-shirt saying "I don't have a clue what I'm talking about". To most longtime Mac users it's like nails on a chalkboard. One might almost say reading it is quite ... painful.
MAC
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