Re: grammars: Hewett, Voelz, etc.

Mary Pendergraft (pender@wfu.edu)
Mon, 18 May 1998 12:56:44 -0400 (EDT)

On Sun, 17 May 1998, Edgar M. Krentz wrote:

> >Chuck's message ends:
> >
> >So I highly recommend Greek, An Intensive Course by
> >>Hansen and Quinn.> >
> I agree about this one with Mary/. But I would add that there is an
> exceellent beginning [classical] Greektext by a woman professor of Classics
> at St. Olaf College (Name escapes me).
>

Anne Groton's _Alpha to Omega_. I've never worked with it, but have heard
from folks who like it very well.

Mary

> And for individual learning on one's own I would also suggest the Greek
> course put out by Cambridge University Press (also for classical Greek).
>
> And Chuck's(?) comment that classical Greek is not that far from Koine is
> right on target. Any suggestion that Koine--by which people on this list
> too often mean Greek in the NT, an extremely short-sighted view-- is
> somehow or other a unique language without continuity with the whole
> history of Greek is just plain wrong. It deserves to be banished from
> b-greek into Limbo. Pardon the homiletical comment, possibly preaching to
> the choir.
>
>
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> Edgar Krentz
> Professor of New Testament
> Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago
> 1100 East 55th Street
> Chicago, IL 650615
> Telephone: (773) 256-0752
> Office: ekrentz@lstc.edu [preferred for anything professional]
> Home: emkrentz@mcs.com [Tel: 773-947-8105]
> GHRASKW AEI MAQWN. I grow older, learning all the time.
> + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + ++
>
>
>

M. L. Pendergraft
Classical Languages
Wake Forest University