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Reading Koine Greek: An Introduction and Integrated Workbook is unavailable, but you can change that!

This in-depth yet student-friendly introduction to Koine Greek provides a full grounding in Greek grammar, while starting to build skill in the use of exegetical tools. The approach, informed by twenty-five years of classroom teaching, emphasizes reading Greek for comprehension as opposed to merely translating it. The workbook is integrated into the textbook, enabling students to encounter real...

Past: I ran. Present: I run. Future: I will run. These statements can be modified by other words to express other nuances. The example, “I run,” can also express future time if we say, “I run a marathon tomorrow.” 5.4. Some verbs (either a simple verb or a verb phrase) have direct objects. That is, there is a substantive (e.g., a noun or pronoun) following the verb that indicates who or what receives the action. A verb that takes a direct object is called a transitive verb. Verbs that do not have
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