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Greek for the Rest of Us: Using Greek Tools without Mastering Biblical Languages is unavailable, but you can change that!

You don’t have to be a Greek student to understand biblical Greek. If you’d love to learn Greek so you can study your Bible better, but you can’t spare two years for college or seminary courses, then Greek for the Rest of Us is for you. Developed by renowned Greek teacher William Mounce, this revolutionary crash-course on “baby Greek” will acquaint you with the essentials of the language and...

English has a simple past that we call the punctiliar: “Bob studied.” English also has a continuous past formed with a helping verb: “Bob was studying.” Greek actually has two tenses that indicate past time. The difference between the two is aspect. • The imperfect describes a continuous action that normally occurs in the past. “I was studying last night.” • The aorist tense describes an undefined action that normally occurs in the past.
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