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I know that we've done work with the Japanese Bible Society, including a reverse interlinear of the "NIT" text of the New Testament. I don't know Japanese, but you can see some screenshots of the product at the below link. I'd guess you could purchase directly from the Japan Bible Society. http://www.bible.or.jp/purchase/newbible/greece.html (scroll
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The SESB LXX has the latest version of the CATSS morphology, corrected and revised by Bernard Taylor. It is not the version that you can find online, it is several updates and revisions removed from that. Rather than implement yet another morph scheme for Greek, the Logos morphological scheme is used to represent the CATSS morph in the SESB LXX. So
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Hi Ron. Yes, it will include 2Thess and also the Pastorals (and eventually the Gospels and Acts). We plan on doing the whole New Testament. However, I don't have any estimates as to release dates at present. Rick Brannan Information Architect, Greek Databases Logos Bible Software http://www.logos.co
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Also know that there is the "Collegeville Catholic Reference Library", which has the Rule of Benedict in two English translations (RB1980 and also Kardong's) as well as notes and translation on these rules. There is also the "Early Monastic Rules" which has scads of other stuff. And there are four dictionaries *and* the Collegeville Bible commentary
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The site is presently "slow and unreliable" because it got slammed by about 20 million hits (that's an accurate figure according to http://evangelicaltextualcriticism.blogspot.com/2009/07/codex-sinaiticus-servers-crashed.html ). Let the glitz and furor die down, and I'm sure the site will become more reliable when Sinaiticus retreats from the news cycle
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Hi Terry. When you click a node in a syntax analysis, you select it. You can copy the selection to the clipboard at any time. By holding the key, you can select multiple groups (and deselect currently selected groups). Since this is a rather large clause complex, I'd recommend selecting smaller chunks and pasting those chunks into MSWord. In this case
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[quote user="Ted Hans"] Now what is the Leob Library or what is contained in this Library? Ted [/quote] Here's the web page from Harvard University Press: http://www.hup.harvard.edu/loeb/ - Rick
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Hi George. I'd say that if you know all of the ways in which BDAG refers to nouns that are used in the neuter, and know conclusively that BDAG always references neuter usage in every possible place, and can disambiguate these from other neuter usage (article, pronoun, participle, adjective) then sure, you could search for such a thing. But that would
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George says: I could have simply done a search of the GNT or the GNT + LXX, but that would involve repeated finding of the same lemma in many instances. After doing the search, click "Search Analysis By Lemma" in the search results window. This will give you a lemma-sorted list of all occurrences. It'll take awhile for queries such at this, but I think
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Yay, forums! Particularly with RSS feeds and especially if the "Search this site" box (above right) is quick.