Greek Word Study
Is there any way to search a Greek word in all it's forms without having to type in "lemma:pisteuw" OR lemma:pistis OR etc" until you've typed in every word (which could take forever)? Note: this is used when you search in Bible, and the Bible is an English one. I also tried to type the root with a wildcard (pist*) in Morph using g:pist* and the words pop up in the drop down box, but if you hit enter, nothing comes up. I'd like to see both the noun and verb forms of a word if that's possible. Thanks!
Steve J.
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Stephen are you looking for this? http://wiki.logos.com/Morphological_Search or this. http://wiki.logos.com/Englishman$27s_Concordance
In the panel menu, make sure that all "Match all word forms" is selected.
Mission: To serve God as He desires.
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(Click on to enlarge)Stephen Jones said:I'd like to see both the noun and verb forms of a word if that's possible
"For the kingdom of God does not consist in words but in power" Wiki Table of Contents
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Stephen, this is one of my most desired features in Logos 4. There is a workaround. If you look up the word in the Lexham Analytic Lexicon there is a list of cognates. Copy and past them to a morph search, add any operators needed and prefix lemma: to them and you will have a Greek cognate search.
Also, please add your vote supporting this feature on Uservoice. http://logos.uservoice.com/forums/42823-logos-bible-software-4/suggestions/682641-stem-cognate-search?ref=title
Prov. 15:23
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Jerry M said:
(Click on to enlarge)Stephen Jones said:I'd like to see both the noun and verb forms of a word if that's possible
Jerry, unfortunately the match all word forms options is English only, it does not apply to Hebrew and Greek
Prov. 15:23
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Kevin Becker said:
Jerry, unfortunately the match all word forms options is English only, it does not apply to Hebrew and Greek
Hi Kevin, your right, you get the same results with it turned off. I took the original poster as wanting all the morphological forms as translated into English, rather than all the cognate forms. My Greek is a little rusty anyway, thanks for pointing this out.
"For the kingdom of God does not consist in words but in power" Wiki Table of Contents
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Kevin Becker said:
There is a workaround. If you look up the word in the Lexham Analytic Lexicon there is a list of cognates
Lexham Analytical Lexicon to the Greek New Testament is included in Scholar's Silver and above.
Workaround expansion: in an English Reverse Interlinear (or Greek New Testament with Morphology tagging), can right click on a word, click lemma, click "The Lexham Analytical Lexicon to the Greek New Testament" (personally top prioritized lexicon for quick access to cognate words), Select (or Highlight) lemma with list of cognate words, then right click, search this resource. Next change search to Morph and edit list of Greek lemma's to be comma separated, then search. For screen shot, had copied search to new tab to show this resource search (Basic) and Morph Search (choose to not look for negated cognates):
In Morph Search, personally chose Analysis, then grouped by Louw-Nida and lemma. Learned Louw-Nida 31.85 has noun πίστις and verb πιστόω
In Morph Search, can click Verses to show cognate lemma translations in an English Reverse Interlinear:
Keep Smiling [:)]
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