Uses of participle

Participles in Classical Greek are widely used, are in the same case/number/gender as the element to which they are referred and may have two different functions: nominal or verbal one.

In the first case, the participle is always preceded by an article and it may be substantivized, acting as a noun, or attributive, acting as an adjective and related to a noun and usually translated with a relative clause.

In the verbal function, the participle is not preceded by an article and it may be verbal, acting as a subordinate clause (causal, temporal, concessive, conditional, purpose); in alternative it may be predicative, which is used after verbs such as to see, to hear, to announce, to declare and helps explaining what you are seeing/hearing/declaring.

MB
Answered by Martina B. Classical Greek tutor

2223 Views

See similar Classical Greek GCSE tutors

Related Classical Greek GCSE answers

All answers ▸

What meaning does the use of a verb in the middle voice convey in a sentence?


How many ways is indirect statement expressed in Greek?


How do you form an aorist verb?


To what extent can mortals transcend their mortal limitations?


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

© MyTutorWeb Ltd 2013–2025

Terms & Conditions|Privacy Policy
Cookie Preferences