"finding Granville Sharp" is a sort of litmus test for the capabilities of Bible software."

A famous person once said:

"If you've been around Bible software, you know that many folks use
"finding Granville Sharp" as a sort of litmus test for the capabilities
of their Bible software."

And I've felt that to be a pretty accurate statement.

I've used v3 to find these constructions, but now I'd like to use V4 and give it a shot...

Can Rick Brannan possibly chime in and get me started? I've had no luck so far in duplicating your syntax search from the PDF posted on the blog.

Also....since the morph search actually replaces the Graphical Query...is it possible to construct a Granville-sharp search in the morph search in V4?

 

http://blog.logos.com/mt-cgi/mt-search.cgi?search=granville&IncludeBlogs=1&limit=20

Robert Pavich

For help go to the Wiki: http://wiki.logos.com/Table_of_Contents__

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    Sorry, but I gave Rick some time to chime [:)]

    Yea, his search is quite convoluted. But here's my simple Granville Sharp:-

    Word 1: ((Part of Speech = article))
    Anything — Match 0 to 1 units
    Word 2: Louw-Nida Domain = 12: Supernatural Beings and Powers
    AND ((Part of Speech = adjective AND Number = singular) OR (Part of Speech =
    noun AND Number = singular) OR (Part of Speech = verb AND Mood = participle AND
    Number = singular)) — Highlight
    Anything — Match 0 to 2 units
    Connector 1
    image Word
    3
    : Lexical Form (no marks) = "και"
    Word 4: ((Part of Speech ≠ article)) — May Repeat 0 to 1
    times
    Word 5: Part of Speech = Word 2 AND Number = Word 2 AND Case
    = Word 2 AND Gender = Word 2 — Highlight

     

    It gets 42 hits in L3 but includes all the quoted passages for God and Saviour, Lord and Saviour --> I haven't done in L4 as yet!

    If you saw my BUG report then believe that doing this in a Morph Search is almost impossible because of the equality required between Word 2 and Word 5 (the simplest requirement is that they have the same Case) and because there is no simple, effective expression to exclude the article in Word 4, unlike L3!

    Dave
    ===

    Windows 11 & Android 13

    Dave,

    I'll try this.

    But isn't there a "must not be present" requirement that could be joined to the article in the second part?

    Robert Pavich

    For help go to the Wiki: http://wiki.logos.com/Table_of_Contents__

    But isn't there a "must not be present" requirement that could be joined to the article in the second part?

    Yes.

    the way they implemented Anything in L4 is such that you cannot apply a number of units to restrict its range. So it would be better to start with a Clause Component and make everyhting hang off that!

    Clause Component

    Word 1: ((Part of Speech = article))
    Anything — Match 0 to 1 units
    Word 2: Louw-Nida Domain = 12: Supernatural Beings and Powers
    AND ((Part of Speech = adjective AND Number = singular) OR (Part of Speech =
    noun AND Number = singular) OR (Part of Speech = verb AND Mood = participle AND
    Number = singular)) — Highlight
    Anything — Match 0 to 2 units
    Connector 1
    image Word
    3
    : Lexical Form (no marks) = "και"
    Word 4: ((Part of Speech ≠ article)) — May Repeat 0 to 1
    times
    Word 5: Part of Speech = Word 2 AND Number = Word 2 AND Case
    = Word 2 AND Gender = Word 2 — Highlight

    Dave
    ===

    Windows 11 & Android 13

    Ok dave...trouble shooting time..what did I do wrong...I got 0 results.

    image

    Robert Pavich

    For help go to the Wiki: http://wiki.logos.com/Table_of_Contents__

    Ok dave...trouble shooting time..what did I do wrong...

    You need to use "Skip Levels" for everything directly connected to the clause  (a Word is preceded by at least a Word Group + Head Term).

    Dave
    ===

    Windows 11 & Android 13

    dave,

    thanks..

    Robert Pavich

    For help go to the Wiki: http://wiki.logos.com/Table_of_Contents__

    dave,

    thanks..

    Bob,

    I found it didn't work very well (if at all!) so i resorted to the more complex method. Anything without limits (eg. 0 to 2 units) is the problem.

    I'm finding it harder work than L3, so how are you going?

    Dave
    ===

    Windows 11 & Android 13

    Dave,
    I got it to work BUT..when i used "should not be present" for the second article...it fails..and I don't know why...

    Robert Pavich

    For help go to the Wiki: http://wiki.logos.com/Table_of_Contents__

    Dave,

    On the latest Beta; your search worked...even with the "must not be present" checked for the second article...

    I haven't checked the accuracy yet...I was just happy to get results that seem correct at first glance... [:O]

     

    image

    Robert Pavich

    For help go to the Wiki: http://wiki.logos.com/Table_of_Contents__

    Do you have to be an MVP to join this discussion? :-)

    I have also played around with this a bit and haven't quite figured it out so far. Once someone figures out, a video tutorial and/or a step by step guide would be great. So, far I haven't seen much in the way tutorials videos on the Morph & Syntax features (I get why, most people probably don't use this anyway) in L4. Any guides would be awesome as I'd like to become more proficient with these features.

    A famous person once said:

    "If you've been around Bible software, you know that many folks use
    "finding Granville Sharp" as a sort of litmus test for the capabilities
    of their Bible software."

    And I've felt that to be a pretty accurate statement.

    I've used v3 to find these constructions, but now I'd like to use V4 and give it a shot...

    Can Rick Brannan possibly chime in and get me started? I've had no luck so far in duplicating your syntax search from the PDF posted on the blog.

    Also....since the morph search actually replaces the Graphical Query...is it possible to construct a Granville-sharp search in the morph search in V4?

    http://blog.logos.com/mt-cgi/mt-search.cgi?search=granville&IncludeBlogs=1&limit=20

    I knew this would come back to haunt me. [:D] If you think I'm famous, you really need to get out more.

    The queries I had for v3 should be able to be used as patterns for v4 queries for OpenText.org. I've been meaning to look into Granville Sharp and the Cascadia Syntax Graphs, but simply haven't had time or opportunity yet. I don't know that I will until after Thanksgiving. I'm responding to this thread so it shows up in my "Your Discussions" link on the forum page, so I won't forget about it.

    If you're really interested, though, I believe Dan Wallace has a complete list in this paper: http://bible.org/article/sharpi-redivivus-i-reexamination-granville-sharp-rule. Also know that he's recently (in the past year) published a version of his thesis on Granville Sharp with Peter Lang, "Granville Sharp's Canon and Its Kin: Semantics and Significance". I'd guess there's a list there too. It could stimulate some thought on the problem.

    The basic problem is that Granville Sharp's rule isn't quite exactly how most people sum it up — two substantives that agree in case/number/gender share the first substantive's article. As I recall it is actually singular "personal" substantives (?) that are *not* proper, and that ends up causing some of the complexity. That is, there are lexical restrictions as well as syntactic and grammatical restrictions/patterns to account for.

    Rick Brannan
    Data Wrangler, Faithlife
    My books in print

    Rick...

    Are you trying to teach me to fish? Instead, just serve me up a plate of "Captain Ricks beer battered fish and hush puppies" thank you....

    [:D]

     

    I have read Dan's article and it was very informative.

    Most people do misquote the rule, and you're right about the personal aspect...tough to do.

    I'll give it a shot....but try not to fill up on turkey and fall asleep...we'll be waiting.... [:O]

    Robert Pavich

    For help go to the Wiki: http://wiki.logos.com/Table_of_Contents__

    The queries I had for v3 should be able to be used as patterns for v4 queries for OpenText.org. I've been meaning to look into Granville Sharp and the Cascadia Syntax Graphs, but simply haven't had time or opportunity yet. I don't know that I will until after Thanksgiving.

    Rick,

    Thanks for your involvement in this one, also. I'll be trying to follow it as I want to become proficient in the original language search capabilities. If you have a chance to engage with us wrt my question in http://community.logos.com/forums/t/4835.aspx I'd appreciate it.

    In order to help you get to it, may I encourage you to take a short drive north, say 40 miles (which will become 65 kilometers) because then Thanksgiving will be over and we can get your input [:)]

    Honestly, you need the break, so enjoy the holiday, next week!

    Chris