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A Book-by-Book Guide to New Testament Greek Vocabulary is unavailable, but you can change that!

A Book-by-Book Guide to New Testament Greek Vocabulary is intended to help students, pastors, and professors who wish to read a particular book of the Bible in its original language to master the vocabulary that occurs most frequently in the book in question. In contrast to typical Hebrew and Greek vocabulary guides, which present vocabulary words based on their frequency in the Hebrew Bible or...

confusion than other options), I provide the entire genitive singular form: e.g., ἀλέκτωρ, ἀλέκτορος, ὁ. When an adjective is given, I provide its lexical form along with the endings or, if necessary, more fully spelled-out forms of its feminine singular (if applicable) and neuter singular. Thus, a 2-1-2 adjective (i.e., one for which the masculine and neuter have second-declension forms and the feminine has first-declension forms) may be given as follows: ἀληθινός, -ή, -όν, or σός, σή, σόν,
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