Changes

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Koine Greek

115 bytes added, 07:04, 3 September 2007
no edit summary
** [[Koine Greek: Nouns|Nouns]] | [[Koine Greek: Definite Article|Definite Article]]
** [[Koine Greek: Verbs|Verbs]]
*** [[Koine Greek: To Be|To Be]]
** [[Koine Greek: Adjectives|Adjectives]]
{{opinions}}
 
{{quotes}}
==Main article==
Koine is the Greek word for "common." Koine Greek was the form of the Greek language used from around 300 BC to AD 300. The books of the [[New Testament]] were originally written in Koine Greek. Koine Greek was the ''lingua franca'' in the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern for hundreds of years following the conquests of Alexander the Great.
For some time the Greek language of the New Testament confused many scholars. It was sufficiently different from Classical Greek that some hypothesized that it was a combination of Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic. Others attempted to explain it as a "Holy Ghost language," assuming that perhaps God created a special language just for the [[Bible]]. But studies of [[Greek]] papyri found in [[Egypt]] over the past 120 years have shown that the Greek of the [[New Testament]] manuscripts was the "common" (koine) language of the everyday people - the same as that used in the writing of wills and private letters.
| omega || ω || Ω || ô or ō || <u>o</u>bey
|}
 
==Quotes==
==Links==
administrator, Bureaucrats, bureaucrats, checkuser, editor, emailconfirmed, move, Administrators
122,009
edits

Navigation menu