Negatives and Noun Phrases in Classical Greek
An Investigation Based on the "Corpus Platonicum</I>
©1997
Thesis
164 Pages
Series:
Studien zur klassischen Philologie, Volume 105
Summary
The use in Classical Greek of the two negatives, ov and un, in noun phrases is a much-debated matter in the literature on Greek grammar. Several, sometimes interrelated, factors have been adduced as decisive for the choice of negative in such cases - the predominant one being that of reference. Already a brief survey of almost any Greek text, however shows that there is a considerable overlap between the employment of ov and un in the uses which the grammarians distinguish. The present study investigates in a consequent fashion the use of the two negatives in noun phrases in the works of Plato. A new picture of negation in Greek noun phrases is thus gradually built up, where the interplay between ov and un in such cases is described in a more consistent way than by the earlier accounts.
Details
- Pages
- 164
- Publication Year
- 1997
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9783631306772
- Language
- English
- Published
- Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1997. 164 pp.
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