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A Workbook for New Testament Syntax is unavailable, but you can change that!

Daniel B. Wallace’s groundbreaking books Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics and Basics of New Testament Syntax have become the standard textbooks among colleges and seminaries for teaching New Testament Greek syntax. This workbook, designed to accompany both books, presents a dynamic approach to learning Greek syntax. Instead of simply learning syntax in single-verse snippets, students are exposed...

1. ἡ μαρτυρία: testimony, witness (v. 7) 5. σκηνόω: I tabernacle, dwell (v. 14) 2. ἀληθινός: true, genuine (v. 9) 6. θεάομαι: I behold, see (v. 14) 3. φωτίζω: I shine, give light, illuminate (v. 9) 7. μονογενής: only (v. 14) 4. παραλαμβάνω: I receive, accept (v. 11) 8. πλήρης: full, filled (v. 14) • ἐγένετο (In the prologue to John’s Gospel [1:1–18], the author displays a tendency to use εἰμί when referring to one who exists eternally, and γίνομαι to refer
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