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Greek Lessons
- Learning Contentment: The Grammar of Sufficiency in Philippians 4:11
- In Vain? Apostolic Anxiety and Grammatical Tension in Galatians 4:11
- Speaking Against and Judging the Law (James 4:11)
- Striving to Enter: Grammatical Urgency and Covenantal Warning in Hebrews 4:11
- In This Name: Grammatical Testimony and Christological Boldness in Acts 4:10
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Category
Tag Archives: ἐξέψυξεν
Aorist Indicative: The Historical Aorist
(1) The Aorist Indicative is most frequently used to express a past event viewed in its entirety, simply as an event or a single fact. It has no reference to the progress of the event, or to any existing result … Continue reading