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Studies in Biblical Greek
This occasional series of monographs is designed to promote and publish the latest research into biblical Greek (Old and New Testaments). The series does not assume that biblical Greek is a distinct dialect within the larger world of koine, but focuses on these corpora because it recognizes the particular interest they generate. Research into the broader evidence of the period, including epigraphical and inscriptional materials, is welcome in the series, provided the results are cast in terms of their bearing on biblical Greek. Primarily, however, the series is devoted to fresh philological, syntactical, text-critical, and linguistic study of the Greek of the biblical books, with the subsidiary aim of displaying the contribution of such study to accurate exegesis.
20 publications
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The Verbal Aspect Integral to the Perfect and Pluperfect Tense-Forms in the Pauline Corpus
A Semantic and Pragmatic Analysis©2022 Monographs -
The Use of Πας in the New Testament
©2004 Monographs -
Verbal Aspect Theory and the Prohibitions in the Greek New Testament
©2014 Monographs -
A History of New Testament Lexicography
©2003 Monographs -
The Greek Imperative Mood in the New Testament
A Cognitive and Communicative Approach©2010 Monographs -
Verbal Aspect in the Greek of the New Testament, with Reference to Tense and Mood
Third Printing©2010 Others -
The Adnominal Genitive in the Pauline Corpus
©2022 Monographs -
Verbal Aspect, the Indicative Mood, and Narrative
Soundings in the Greek of the New Testament©2007 Monographs -
Verbal Aspect and Non-Indicative Verbs
Further Soundings in the Greek of the New Testament©2008 Monographs -
The Perfect Storm
Critical Discussion of the Semantics of the Greek Perfect Tense Under Aspect Theory©2021 Monographs