AB URBE CONDITA CONSTRUCTIONS IN GREEK, WITH SPECIAL ATTENTION TO HOMERIC GRAMMAR
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14409/argos.2019.43.e0015Keywords:
Homer, Participles, Ab urbe condita, GrammarAbstract
This article will examine ab urbe condita constructions in Homer (a typical example: ἐς ἠέλιον καταδύντα “until sunset”) and, subsidiarily, in other Greek authors. It aims to prove that these constructions can be distinguished from other analogous ones by four features, to wit: a) the participle is necessary, except in a limited group of verbs (“to be”, “to become” and the like); b) the participle always modifies the nucleus of a prepositional term; c) the participle is predicative, not attributive; d) the participle has a relatively fixed position.
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Published
2021-04-28
How to Cite
Fernández, T. (2021). AB URBE CONDITA CONSTRUCTIONS IN GREEK, WITH SPECIAL ATTENTION TO HOMERIC GRAMMAR. Argos, (43), e0015. https://doi.org/10.14409/argos.2019.43.e0015
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