Street Greek students,
In the past, we’ve learned about the personal pronouns eijmiv, suv, aujtovV (I, you, he/she/it), the indefinite pronoun tiV (anyone, someone, a certain one), the interrogative pronoun tivV (who? what? which? why?), and the demonstrative pronoun ou{toV, ejkeivnoV (this/that, these/those).
Tonight, we were introduced to one last kind of pronoun called the relative pronoun o{V, h{, o{ (who, whom, that, which, whose). It is used to begin a relative clause, which contains a subject and verb, but depends on a main verb somewhere else in the sentence. We saw that relative pronouns look a lot like the article, except that they always have a rough breathing mark and accent. For the most part, they follow the normal 2-1-2 case endings.
We will not meet the next two Tuesdays, so this is a prime opportunity to get caught up. Your homework for next time is …
Review all Vocab through ch. 14 (a total of 169 words now)
Ex. 14 Parsing #1-4
Ex. 14 Warm-up b, g, d
Ex. 14 Translation #1 & 7
Look through Chs 10-14 Review #3 (pp. 53-56) and try answering some of the questions. Make sure you can write from memory the entire case ending paradigm.
You might also want to start reading ahead into chs 15-16 on verbs.
Talk to you on Tuesday, June 21. Just think, if you spend just 15 min. per day for the next three weeks, you could be all caught up and ready to learn verbs with us!
Thanks,
Pastor Stephen