Greek

The Articles ὁ/τοῦ/τὸν in Classical Greek Names (Greek)

The Articles ὁ/τοῦ/τὸν in Classical Greek Names (Greek)
  1. What are the Greek articles?
  2. Are there articles in Ancient Greek?
  3. What are the 5 cases in Greek?

What are the Greek articles?

Greek has three different definite articles - ο, η, and το (o, i, to, "the") for the masculine, feminine, and neuter genders, respectively. They are inflected, so their forms can change. An article defines a noun and it needs to always "agree" with it in gender, number, and case.

Are there articles in Ancient Greek?

Unlike many modern languages ancient Greek also has cases, and the definite article reflects this. The definite article may also not be used in the same grammatical way that it is in modern languages.

What are the 5 cases in Greek?

In Greek they are five: nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, and vocative, or, ordered differently, nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, and vocative. Each case has certain specific functions, indicating the meaning of each noun in relation to other words in the sentence.

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