- What is aorist active indicative?
- What is an example of aorist tense?
- What is aorist indicative in Ancient Greek?
- What is an active indicative verb?
What is aorist active indicative?
The aorist indicative is also used to express things that happen in general, without asserting a time (the "gnomic aorist"). It can also be used of present and future events; the aorist also has several specialized senses meaning present action.
What is an example of aorist tense?
The aorist is often used in the same kinds of contexts in which we would find a simple past tense verb in English. For that reason, the aorist is often translated into English as a simple past tense, like the verb “played” in the sentence, “Karen played tennis yesterday.”
What is aorist indicative in Ancient Greek?
In the grammar of Ancient Greek, including Koine, the aorist (pronounced /ˈeɪ. ərɪst/ or /ˈɛərɪst/) is a class of verb forms that generally portray a situation as simple or undefined, that is, as having aorist aspect.
What is an active indicative verb?
Thus, present active indicative shows that the action happens in the present time, that the subject carries out the action, and that it is a true statement.