Exhaustive N.T. Greek verbs inflection resource???

Many of you probably remember books like "501 Spanish Verbs - Fully Conjugated in All Tenses" from high school Spanish. I'm looking for an equivalent for verbs in the Greek N.T.
I'm taking first year Greek now. Of course, we learn new vocabulary words with every lesson, and we're working our way through various verb forms. I'm trying to diligently conjugate new vocab words in previously-learned forms and previously-learned vocab words in newly-learned forms. Unfortunately, I don't have any resource against which I can check my work. I'm aware of a couple of resources (dead tree books) which provide principal parts for forms that do appear in the Greek N.T. (e.g. Mounce's Morphology of Biblical Greek and Vance's Greek Verbs in the N.T. and Their Principal Parts). However, those only deal with forms found in the Greek N.T.
I'd love a resource which goes ahead and provides inflections / conjugations for all Greek verbs that appear in the N.T. even if a particular form isn't itself found in the Greek N.T. And in case I'm not being clear with use of the word "form", I mean every combination of tense, voice, mood, person, and number.
Is anyone aware of such a resource, web site, etc.?
Many thanks,
Donnie
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This should provide what you're looking for: http://www.logos.com/product/4580/lexham-analytical-lexicon-to-the-greek-new-testament
Update: Sorry, I see now that you are looking for forms that don't appear in the NT, too. For that you might try looking up the word in LSJ. LSJ covers classical Greek too. http://www.tlg.uci.edu/lsj/#eid=9234&context=lsj&action=from-search
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Thanks for the replies. The Lexham isn't too bad - I do have it. It's just not organized how I need to use it, even for the forms it has. But it's the best I've found for checking forms I've conjugated if they're in the N.T.
The LSJ doesn't have the very first word I tried (doxazo - forgive the transliteration).
Thanks again,
Donnie
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Donnie,
I happen to find (and want to respond) to two threads from you in the same day. Haha.
Yes, please. If anyone knows of a good resource (online or otherwise) like that. I'd really love to find it too.
-Andrew Hodge
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This still won't give forms outside of the Bible, but if you have the interactive tool "Morphology Charts" it will give you all biblical forms for either Greek or Hebrew. You can either type in Greek or Hebrew (if you have the keyboards installed) or type a g: (for Greek) or h: (for Hebrew) and transliterate the word. Typing "g:dox" will pull down three options, and you can select δοξάζω. It'll work for noun cases also.
Another possibility to fill in some other forms is the Lexham Analytical Lexicon of the Septuagint. I haven't looked to see how exhaustive it is (nor read the intro) but it has quite a few inflections...and may provide more info to "fill in the gaps" for some of the parsings not found in the NT.
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