Loading…

Linguistic Analysis of the Greek New Testament: Studies in Tools, Methods, and Practice is unavailable, but you can change that!

Leading scholar Stanley Porter brings readers up to date on the latest advances in New Testament Greek linguistics. Porter bundles a variety of studies of the New Testament’s original language under three rubrics: texts and tools for analysis, approaching analysis, and doing analysis. He deals with multiple of New Testament texts, including passages from the Synoptic Gospels, John’s writings, and...

itself, but rather are rewritten in ordinary language. There is thus also no use of technical logical terms to indicate these relations. Logical relations, however, are implied by the organization of the lexicon. Within any domain, there are often a number of subdomains. This use of subdomains tends to indicate a loose attempt at hyponymous relations, with the superordinate term having a number of hyponyms. These are not technically hyponymous, however, since the purported hyponym is often not an
Page 50