![]() If a word is a cognate to an English word (same meaning and related etymology), then I’ve shown that with bold in the definition (and a tag). No new vocab is added in these cards (marked with a scale), but I hope they are helpful for study nonetheless. I’ve added “Contrast” cards for some of these pairs. In a few cases, two different words are very similar and easily confused. The “suff-baino” tag can show how many of them are used as a prefix, but that’s not always how they’re used as standalone prepositions. I’ve done what I can, but they need more study than flashcards can provide. Prepositions resist simple translation across languages. All hapaxes have a verse, and the hapax is shown in bold. If you study the cards in order, you should have seen every vocab word before it appears in a verse. I’ve added Bible verses into some of the cards. If they are different enough to have different Strong’s numbers, a separate card will be created for each word. If they are truly just variations of the same word, only a single card is created, and a random word will be displayed each time. I did my best to confirm that all combined words have substantially the same definition. I have combined some closely related words into the same note. Credit to for making the audio publicly available, and to previous commenters for sharing the link. Personally, I’m not a fan of how the Erasmian pronunciation sounds, but that’s what’s available, so that’s what I added here. Many people requested audio, so I’ve added it here. These are usually easy to recognize without much study. They include the Greek text of the verse in which they are used, but do not include audio.Ĥ: Contains all the proper words (names and nationalities) in the NT. In theory, you should also be able to determine the meaning of the other words from the context.Ģ: Contains all the other words used more than once in the NT.ģ: Contains all the hapax legomena (words used only once in the NT), sorted by order of appearance in the NT. Once you know these, you'll be able to recognize almost 95% of the text of the NT. ![]() This deck contains all the Koine Greek words used in the New Testament, sorted into 4 subdecks:ġ: Contains all the words used 6 or more times in the NT, sorted by frequency. Thanks to everyone who offered positive reviews on that I hope I didn’t overdo this one, but all the changes I made were things that I personally think are helpful (or make it look nicer). This is an update of my previous deck ( ).
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