The personal pronoun of the third person is rare in attic prose.
Attic greek personal pronouns.
αὐτός αὐτή αὐτό ν is declined like σοφός 76 except that there is no vocative and the neuter singular nominative and accusative.
More in the file below.
Lesson 7 relative pronouns.
The man who lives next to me has a goat.
I expect that many.
Possessive pronouns κτητικές αντωνυμίες.
Nouns adjectives pronouns articles numerals and especially verbs are all highly inflected.
In its place is used αὐτός in the oblique cases.
εγώ ζα πάω εσύ δελ ζα παο πνπζελά.
The personal pronouns including reflexives and reciprocals.
I shall go you will not go anywhere.
The forms placed within brackets are the weak forms the other are the emphatic ones.
Personal pronouns are declinable words that express the first second or third person and may be used instead of nouns.
Paradigm gender and number case attraction inverse attraction the words who which and what are relative pronouns when they are used to introduce a relative clause.
Greek uses a single pronoun for all of these and declines it by gender number and case.
Personal pronouns may be used to add emphassis.
οἷ and σφίσι occur oftenest and are reflexive 200.
Ancient greek grammar is morphologically complex and preserves several features of proto indo european morphology.
Consider the following sentence.
Note also that the resulting form is accented as though it were a regular first or second declension noun with a persistent ultima accent s 329.
An intensive course and mastronarde s introduction to attic greek but are mainly meant to provide one page overviews of some important verbal paradigms satisfactory versions of many of which i have failed to find in english language greek textbooks.
The use of personal pronouns with verbs is not obligatory as persons are indicated by the unique personal endings of the verbs.
While the definite article has the stem τ this pronoun has the stem αὐτ.
Our first pronoun is the greek equivalent he she it.
The dual and plural are νώ nṓ and ἡμεῖς hēmeîs.
3rd person personal pronoun.
Nom gen acc voc singular 1e person 2e person.
Note that for this pronoun attic greek combines the personal and reflexive pronouns into one form for both the singular and plural.
The following table shows the declension of the personal pronouns.
The simple sentence consists of the main clause the man has a goat.
Note that for this pronoun attic greek combines the personal and reflexive pronouns into one form for both the singular and plural.