Grammar Summary Sheet: Accusative Absolute
Grammar Summary Sheet: Accusative Absolute
Grammar Summary Sheet: Accusative Absolute
Accusative Absolute
With impersonal verbs (see below), instead of a genitive absolute, an accusative absolute may be used, employing the
accusative form of the neuter participle (the idea being that the subject is ‘it’ and is contained within the verb). The
following forms are common, with literal meaning as follows:
The subject is generally sandwiched between the article and the infinitive. Since the infinitive is not indicative, this
construction is negated using μη.
Impersonal Verbs
An impersonal verb is a verb without a grammatically determined subject. Instead, the person to whom the impersonal
verb refers is placed in either the accusative or the dative depending on which impersonal verb is being used:
Relative Attraction
Relative attraction is a grammatical oddity whereby a relative pronoun which should formally be accusative is placed
into a genitive or dative case due to an antecedent in that case. For example,
τῆς γάρ τοι γενεῆς ἧς* Τρωΐ περ εὐρύοπα Ζεὺς *should be accusative
For they are of that breed which far-thundering Zeus gave to Tros
Particles
In his authoritative book The Greek Particles, J.D. Denniston defines a particle “as a word expressing a mode of
thought, considered either in isolation or in relation to another thought, or a mood of emotion.” Their functions
include conveying nuance by colouring the interpretation of a sentence. Greek has an extensive collection of particles,
which fall into two very broad categories: connectives (και, μεν...δε, ἀλλα, εἰτε... εἰτε) and emphatics (γε, δη, περ, τοι),
though there are many outliers. Translation can often be quite context-dependent.
ἄρχομαι I begin
ἥδομαι mI enjoy
λανθάνω I escape the notice of
παυομαι I cease
τυγχάνω I happen
φθάνω I anticipate, do first
χαίρω I rejoice
But now, I am terribly afraid in my mind that (or lest) she has beguiled you
Fearing that something may not happen is expressed with both μη and οὐ. The same pattern is used for verbs of
precaution and prevention.
Time Clauses
Time clauses subordinate part of a sentence temporally, and, when definite, contain an indicative verb (when
indefinite, normal sequence of tenses is used, i.e. subjunctive for primary, optative for historic). Time clauses are
generally introduced by one of the following conjunctions:
Before ἐπεί when, since, after
ἐξ οὗ since
ὅτε when
ὡς when, as, because
πρίν + infinitive before
Simultaneously ἐν ᾧ while
ἔως while
After ἔως until
μέχρι until
πρίν until
πρότερον ἤ lit. any sooner than, until