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Going Deeper with New Testament Greek: An Intermediate Study of the Grammar and Syntax of the New Testament is unavailable, but you can change that!

From their decades of combined teaching experience, Andreas J. Köstenberger, Benjamin L. Merkle, and Robert L. Plummer have produced an ideal resource enabling students to improve their skills so they may properly read, exegete, and apply the Greek New Testament. Designed for those with a basic knowledge of Greek, Going Deeper with New Testament Greek is a user-friendly textbook for intermediate...

[489] There is wide consensus in the relevant scholarly literature today that Greek, unlike English, is aspect-prominent.[490] In other words, the Greek speaker or writer chooses to present an action from a certain subjective vantage point. This choice of perspective (verbal aspect) is more prominent in Greek verbs than the time at which the action is performed and/or the way in which the action is performed (i.e., the
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