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| | Koine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Koine was the original language of the New Testament, for the writings of the early Christian Church Fathers and for all of Greek literature for about ten centuries. |  | | The literal meaning of the Greek word koine (κοινή) is "common". |  | | Koine Modern Greek is a term sometimes used to describe what in English is generally known as Standard Modern Greek. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koine
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| | GREEK, Modern |
 | | Dialects: The dialect complexity of Ancient Greek was to a large extent levelled out during the Hellenistic period with the emergence of the relatively unified variety of Greek known as the Koine (see chapter on Ancient Greek). |  | | Still, compared to Ancient Greek, Post-Classical Greek, from the Koine through to the modern language, shows a greater number and use of analytic structures, supplanting some of the earlier synthetic ones in Middle Greek. |  | | Other information: As noted in the previous chapter and the above section on verbal morphology, from the Koine on into Medieval Greek, complementation was increasingly with finite clauses only, in place of the earlier infinitival complementation. |
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http://www.ling.ohio-state.edu/~bjoseph/articles/gmodern.htm
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| | Greek Lie: The Koine Language is Greek by Risto Stefov |
 | | Greek Lie: The Koine Language is Greek by Risto Stefov |  | | Unfortunately, after two millennium of evolution, the modern version of Koine contained many foreign elements and proved distasteful to the Greek purists who wanted a pure language which was close to those of the ancient City States. |  | | While Koine served its purpose in the administrative and commercial circles, other languages, languages of the people, simultaneously also flourished in parallel but in their oral form until they were later codified by Christianity. |
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http://www.maknews.com/html/articles/stefov/stefov59.html
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| | Textus Receptus |
 | | Koine (Greek) means "common
" This Koine Greek began in Ancient Greece at about 350 BC and was continuously spoke until approximately 500 A.D. From the Original Common (Koine) Greek, came the translations, then versions, then revisions. |  | | COMMON (Koine) Greek was "invented" by Alexander The Greek for a most needed purpose. |  | | This Common or Koine Greek is for the common people. |
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http://www.primitivebaptist.org/H.Bass/textus_receptus.htm
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| | Manuscript Evidence Supporting the King James Bible |
 | | At that time, many Koine Greek manuscripts were therefore altered from the Koine Greek in which they had originally been written, with the addition of these "Atticisms". |  | | Nevertheless, some "Atticisms" were still retained by Koine Greek; and these "Atticisms" are helpful in determining the extent to which certain Greek manuscripts were altered by the scribes that copied them. |  | | This Diatesseron was one of the "extrabiblical writings" mentioned on Page 1 of this study, which was written in Koine Greek, and which points to the fact that "the language of the New Testament is Koine, or common Greek, that which was used in homes and marketplaces". |
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http://www.geocities.com/benwebb.geo/KJV.html
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| | Bolo Boffin |
 | | The Hebrew scriptures had been translated into Koine Greek three centuries before Jesus lived. |  | | Koine Greek, the most common language of the day, isn't used in the film. |  | | All of the Christian scriptures were written in Koine Greek. |
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http://boloboffin.blogspot.com/2004_02_08_boloboffin_archive.html
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| | The Error of King James Only. |
 | | "Koine" Greek was the name given to the version of Attic Greek that was spoken in the first century and was the kind of Greek that the New Testament was written in. |  | | Koine Greek is the "common" form of Attic Greek. |  | | And, this is the MOST Koine of the New Testament books in the Peshitta. |
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http://www.revneal.org/Writings/errorof.htm
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| | Learning Biblical Koine Greek |
 | | Rather, the study of Koine Greek is but a means to a greater goal: to understand the world out of which the New Testament originated. |  | | My prayer is that the study of biblical Koine Greek will inspire a life-long study of the Greek New Testament in a quest to gain more and more spiritual insights for serving our Lord. |  | | As one sets out to produce a new beginning Koine Greek grammar, reasons for such an endeavor should be clearly in the mind of the author, as well as be clearly articulated to the potential reader and user. |
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http://cranfordville.com/classes/gkgrm00.html
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| | A Dumbell's Guide to Greek - Introduction |
 | | As a result, the Gospel was able to spread to the known world because of Koine Greek. |  | | The Greek dialect called Koine was based on the spoken Attic dialect with some various dialectal influence. |  | | Koine was such an influence that Roman senators and governors had their decrees translated into this dialect. |
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http://dumbellgreek.gospelcom.net/intro.html
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| | koine - Community Info |
 | | 19: ancient greek, ancient hebrew, aramaic, bethlehem, bible, biblical greek, biblical hebrew, capernaeum, capernaum, caperneum, galilee, greek, hebrew, jerusalem, judea, koine greek, new testament, new testament greek, the bible. |  | | Below is information about the "Koine Greek" community on LiveJournal. |  | | This is a discussion of Koine (New Testament) Greek, and the various theological implications of words, phrases, etc. No religion-bashing/promoting... |
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http://www.livejournal.com/userinfo.bml?user=koine
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| | Elendzija (Cheater) by Nikola Spasikov |
 | | Koine was not just a “Greek language&; but the international language of the entire eastern Mediterranean world. |  | | While they used Koine, the international language to communicate with outsiders, they spoke another language (labeled “unknown” by the modern Greeks) to communicate at home. |  | | The use of Koine in Macedonia does not necessarily imply the Macedonians were “Greek&;. |
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http://www.maknews.com/html/articles/spasikov/elendzija.htm
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| | Greek language - encyclopedia article about Greek language. |
 | | Through Koine Greek it is also traced the origin of Christianity, as the Apostles used it to preach in Greece and the Greek-speaking world. |  | | Koine Greek can be initially traced within the armies and conquered territories of Alexander the Great, but after the Hellenistic colonisation of the known world, it was spoken from Egypt to the fringes of India. |  | | After the Roman conquest of Greece, an unofficial diglossy of Greek and Latin was established in the city of Rome and Koine Greek became a first or second language in the Roman Empire. |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Greek+language
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| | Differences Between Classical and Hellenistic Greek |
 | | Robertson characterizes Koinê Greek as a later development of Classical Greek, that is, the dialect spoken in Attica (the region around Athens) during the classical period. |  | | Koinê used personal pronouns in oblique cases much more often, whereas writers in Attic used them only when they were necessary for clarity. |  | | Another syntactical feature of Classical Greek missing in Koinê is the object clause. |
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http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~jtreat/koine/classical.html
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| | Koine from LiveJournal |
 | | That is, I'm going to learn Koine (Biblical) Greek and Hebrew so I can read the Bible in the original. |  | | Seems only fair to use a book about the fictional aspects of Jesus Christ for advanced modern language study, when I used Christian documents to learn Latin and the New Testament to learn Koine Greek. |  | | Latin, French, and a fairly decent amount of Koine Greek. |
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http://www.ljseek.com/search/Koine
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| | Jesus.com.au - Koine Greek |
 | | I am a debtor both to Greeks and to barbarians, both to the wise and to the foolish. |  | | Next · Manuscripts Navigation · Home > Jesus > History > Koine |  | | If you maintain a website which uses accented Greek, the PHP Betacode Script which provides these functions may be more useful still. |
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http://www.jesus.com.au/html/page/koine
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| | Greek Koine language |
 | | The colloquial Koine was expressed in thre language of the Greek Bible. |  | | Koine is the grade lying between the Ancient Greek and the New Greek language. |  | | Greek Koine had some characteristics which reflect another large step in the development of Greek in whole. |
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http://indoeuro.bizland.com/tree/gree/koine.html
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| | SBF Glossary: KJV to K9, K-9 |
 | | Philo of Alexandria, Polybius, and Flavius Josephus wrote in Koine, and the language of the Christian Testament, written in the first centuries of this era, is believed to resemble spoken Koine closely. |  | | (Although it was traditionally believed that the ``John'' who wrote Revelations was the same as the ``John'' who wrote the nonsynoptic gospel, an examination of their writing styles in Koine shows a number of Palestinian errors in Revelations, strongly indicating that they were different authors. |  | | The Septuagint (LXX), a second-century Alexandrian translation of the Hebrew Bible (based, according to tradition, on a consensus of seventy translators) is written in Koine, although it contains some |
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http://www.plexoft.com/SBF/K01.html
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| | [ WAY WAY OT ;] wish links to Koine Greek etymology - DSP |
 | | Posted: Sun Dec 26, 2004 1:36 am Post subject: Re: [ WAY WAY OT ;] wish links to Koine Greek etymology |  | | Posted: Sun Dec 26, 2004 2:06 am Post subject: Re: [ WAY WAY OT ;] wish links to Koine Greek etymology |  | | Posted: Sun Dec 26, 2004 2:56 am Post subject: Re: [ WAY WAY OT ;] wish links to Koine Greek etymology |
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http://www.castalk.com/ftopic640.html
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| | Greek Lexicon |
 | | By the time the New Testament was written (mid to late 1st century A.D.) koine Greek had become the common language in Israel. |  | | Koine Greek become more popular in Rome than Latin. |  | | One of the titles of the Emperor was the koine word, "kurios," (kuriov) which means "Lord." It was a divine title of the emperor! |
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http://studylight.org/lex/grk
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Septuagint Version |
 | | Septante, mentions the more recent opinion of Deissmann that the Greek of the Septuagint is merely the ordinary vernacular Greek, the pure koine of the time. |  | | Everyone admits that the Septuagint Version was made in popular Greek, the koine dislektos. |  | | Grec biblique, asserts that it was "the hebraicizing Greek spoken by the Jewish community at Alexandria", the popular Greek of Alexandria "with a very large admixture of Hebraicisms". |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13722a.htm
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| | JIMMY AKIN.ORG: Attic Vs. Koine |
 | | Attic) Greek in school, it is very easy to study Koine, or read the New Testament. |  | | Koine is basically just Attic, with the distinctively Attic-dialect features replaced with more "standard" ones from the East Ionic dialects (e.g., the verbs which end in -ttw in Attic will end in -ssw in koine, the form used in most of the other Greek dialects). |  | | Also, Koine is a generally simplified form, so if you can hack it in Attic, that gives you a big leg up on Koine. |
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http://www.jimmyakin.org/2005/09/attic_vs_koine.html
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| | Greek Self Study Materials |
 | | Because a student enters a world of Koine Greek and begins to interact with the language directly, without the mediation of a second language. |  | | Living Koine Greek comes with one book and three audio CDs. |  | | A revised and re-recorded edition of the Living Koine Greek, Part 2 is underway. |
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http://www.biblicalulpan.org/pages/greekssmat1.html
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| | Koine Greek - Wikibooks, collection of open-content textbooks |
 | | This text serves as an introduction to Koine Greek, also known as Biblical Greek, appropriate for a two year course. |  | | Koine Greek- Wikibooks, collection of open-content textbooks |  | | For more free language-learning information on koine Greek (used in the New Testament, and by the army of Alexander the Great), go to Textkit's website at http://www.textkit.com |
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http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Koine_Greek
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| | koine -- Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - The online encyclopedia you can trust! |
 | | Based chiefly on the Attic dialect, the Koine superseded the other ancient Greek dialects by the 2nd century AD. |  | | The classical example of a koine (as well as the source of the term) is Hellenistic Greek, which developed from Attic Greek through replacement of the most distinctively Attic features by features of Ionic or other dialects. |  | | A scholarly study of Koine Greek may be found in F. Blass and A. Debrunner, A Greek Grammar of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, trans. |
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http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-9369342
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| | (Carl:) A question about koine pronunciation |
 | | On the itacism question, the good news is that for roman Koine there was only EI=I, AI=E, W=O and OI=U. H, A, OU remain themselves. |  | | Today in class we ran across some obvious advantages to this later system, we were reading some Greek documents from the Dead Sea, the non-Jewish, Greek Bar Kochba letter (e.g., PEMSE=PEMYAI +"no desire to write in Hebrew") and a Bababa Greek document. |  | | Students acquainted with Emic Koine had no problem, those with traditional pronunciations found things bizarre. |
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http://lists.ibiblio.org/pipermail/b-greek/2000-November/014133.html
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| | KU Classics Club - Koine Greek software? |
 | | Hi, does anybody know of suitable software I could purchase to learn Koine Greek? |  | | I probably won't ever be able to fit Greek 104 or 105 into my schedule, but am interested in it for fanatical religious reasons. |  | | I hope I don't slack too much with this whole "learning Greek" idea, and I hope my advisor doesn't kill me when I bring up the idea of Greek 104/105, hehe (I'm a computer science student). |
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http://www.ku.edu/cgiwrap/~kuclsx/yabb/YaBB.cgi?board=gen;action=display;num=1096936223
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