William W. Goodwin (1831 1912) was Eliot Professor of Greek at
Harvard from 1860 to 1901, and was the first director of the
American School in Athens. This, his most important book, was
written for nineteenth-century American students to make available
to them the latest European developments in the understanding of
Greek syntax, as well as his own original material. It went through
several editions between 1860 and 1890, and remains an invaluable
resource for scholars of the Greek language. This is a reissue of
the 1867 edition, published in Cambridge Massachusetts by Sever and
Francis. It presents a detailed and well organized discussion of
moods, tenses, infinitive, participles and verbal adjectives.
Goodwin includes a large collection of examples taken from a wide
range of major Greek writers to illustrate every variety of each
construction. An index of these examples is also provided for easy
reference.
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