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A New Syntax of the Verb in New Testament Greek: An Aspectual Approach
In recent decades it has been increasingly recognized that the forms of the verb in ancient Greek, including that of the New Testament, do not signal time (past, present, future), …
Verbal Aspect and Non-Indicative Verbs
Constantine R. Campbell continues the work begun in his previous volume, Verbal Aspect, the Indicative Mood, and Narrative: Soundings in the Greek of the New Testament. In this …
The Perfect Storm
Nowhere are the chaotic debates surrounding contemporary aspect theory more heated than in discussions of the theory’s application to Hellenistic Greek, and especially its …
The Verbal Aspect Integral to the Perfect and Pluperfect Tense-Forms in the Pauline Corpus
This book argues that the verbal aspect of the Greek Perfect is complex, involving not one but two aspects, where the perfective applies to events and the imperfective applies to …
An Analysis of the Attributive Participle and the Relative Clause in the Greek New Testament
Many New Testament Greek grammarians assert that the Greek attributive participle and the Greek relative clause are "equivalent." Michael E. Hayes disproves those assertions in An …
The Greek Imperative Mood in the New Testament
The imperative mood as a whole has generally been neglected by Greek grammarians. The Greek Imperative Mood in the New Testament: A Cognitive and Communicative Approach utilizes …
Aspectual Substitution
Aspectual Substitution: Verbal Change in New Testament Quotations of the Septuagint examines quotations where the New Testament author quotes the Septuagint but changes the …
Verbal Aspect Theory and the Prohibitions in the Greek New Testament
The end of the twentieth and the beginning of the twenty-first centuries have involved much discussion on overhauling and refining a scholarly understanding of the verbal system …