I would appreciate thoughts on the following from this community of experts!
The Goal...
To read the Greek NT in Mobile Logos, and be able to tap a word (or an associated Strongs number) and have the simple morph/gloss pop up on demand.
My present workaround is to put Greek NT in left pane and an interlinear on the right pane. But I lean too much on the English interlinear text as a crutch.
How I do this on the desktop version...
I use SBL Greek NT. If I hover over the word with the mouse cursor, a footnote appears with information including a short morphology and gloss for the definition. For reading purposes, it's perfect!!! Quite convenient and simple compared to looking up a typical lexicon entry. The short glosses are excellent for quickly catching word meanings.
What I'm asking for on the mobile version (ideally both iOS and Android)...
The same thing, but instead of mouse hover to show brief morph/gloss, I'd like to tap a word in the Greek manuscript (or a strongs link right under the word) and have it show up immediately as a pop up or in the second pane.
Requirement #1: Should be fast and trivial to go back to the regular Greek text without using history.
Requirement #2: It has to display a simple gloss or morph/gloss.
(Otherwise, it would be easier to just keep using an interlinear in the second pane.)
More context...
What I am trying to do is not unlike the Zondervan Reader's Greek NT with the <30 words defined as footnotes, but with every word gloss available, and maybe the morph as a bonus.
I'm not picky about which Greek manuscript, and of course I'm willing to buy a new resource to do this.
Note: I've tried just showing manuscript and Strongs/L-N in the interlinear, but when I tap, it doesn't give me a nice tidy morph and gloss. I have to shift my attention away from the text and focus on the lexicon to get the meaning. Maybe there is a really simple Strongs reference that would accomplish this by providing a very simple gloss instead of a lot of "fluff"?
Final comments...
I suspect this would be useful for anyone learning Greek, who wants to spend part of their effort in real text instead of only studying their Grammar. But I'm devoting a lot of hours to this activity, so it's a purely selfish question, and any tips would be much appreciated.
Thanks for any ideas (or thoughts on why it's not possible).
Bob
(no, not that Bob!)