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Nominal System (Gender, Number, Case)

(5,028 words)

Author(s): Wolfgang Dressler | Georgia Katsouda
Abstract The classical Ancient Greek noun declension, as described within the framework of Natural Morphology, has three macroclasses, with the nom. and gen. sg. as reference forms. The first macroclass is constituted by feminines with a word-final thematic vowel (V) in the nom. plus a suffix -s in the gen., such as phḗmē ‘reputation’. The second macroclass is represented by masculines in -V-s and neuters in - on in the nom. and a final vowel in the gen. The very heterogeneous third macroclass has as reference forms nom. in -s for masculines and feminines, gen. suffix -os for all genders. 1. I…
Date: 2013-11-01

Pronominal System

(4,648 words)

Author(s): Wolfgang Dressler | Georgia Katsouda
Abstract As in other archaic Indo-European languages, Ancient Greek personal pronouns are very suppletive and with idiosyncratic declension in the first and second person and the reflexive third person, whereas the non-reflexive third person is inflected like the definite article. Greek specialties are an additional set of reflexive pronouns for all persons which typologically resemble the English reflexives, a differentiation of three distances in the demonstrative pronouns, and an extensive system of correlative pronouns based on word-initial submorphemes. 1. Introduct…
Date: 2013-11-01