A Greek grammar of the new testament and other early christian literature
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A Greek grammar of the new testament and other early christian literature
University of Chicago Press, c1961
- Other Title
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Grammatik des neutestamentlichen Griechisch
Available at / 44 libraries
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Seinan Gakuin University Library図
194.585||B57gF-48300148759,
194.585||B57gF8300139626, 194.585||B57gF-28300123687, 194.585||B57gF-38300134288 -
Library of Tokyo Union Theological Seminary
120.67/B 6130000446401,0000446419,0000446393,0000703090
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Note
Originally published : Göttingen, Germany : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This work was created by Friedrich Blass, professor of classical philology at the University of Halle-Wittenberg, and was continued after his death by Albert Debrunner, professor of Indo-European and classical philology at the University of Bern until his retirement in 1954. The grammar has passed through ten editions from 1896 to 1960.
Robert W. Funk, in translating this long-established classic, has also revised it and, in doing so, has incorporated the notes which Professor Debrunner had prepared for a new German edition on which he was working at the time of his death in 1958. Dr. Funk has also had the co-operation of leading British, Continental, and American scholars. The translation places in the hands of English-speaking students a book that belongs in their libraries and in the libraries of every theologian, philologist and pastor alongside the Gingrich-Danker Greek-English Lexicon.
This grammar sets the Greek of the New Testament in the context of Hellenistic Greek and compares and contrasts it with the classical norms. It relates to the New Testament language to its Semitic background, to Greek dialects, and to Latin and has been kept fully abreast of latest developments and manuscript discoveries. It is at no point exclusively dependent on modern editions of the Greek New Testament text but considers variant readings wherever they are significant. It is designed to compress the greatest amount of information into the smallest amount of space consistent with clarity. There are subsections discussing difficult or disputed points and copious citations of primary texts in addition to generous bibliographies for those who wish to pursue specific items further.
by "Nielsen BookData"