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LA161 Learn to Use Biblical Greek with Logos 6 is unavailable, but you can change that!

When it comes to biblical Greek, one of the first things people want to know is what a given word means, where it occurs, and how often. Johnny Cisneros shows you how to answer these questions right from the beginning, with just a few clicks in Logos. He also introduces you to nearly a dozen Greek dictionaries, commentaries, and Bible dictionaries and how to use them for interpretation. Similar...

Greek has four moods in its verbal system: the indicative, the imperative, the subjunctive, and the optative. You’ll notice that in the morph picker within the Visual Filter document, there are two other terms included under Mood—infinitive and participle. These are not actually moods, but since they have tense and voice like other verbs, they’re included under Mood. Out of the four moods, only the indicative carries significance for the time of the action—that is, when the action occurred. Was it