Verbs

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Hebrew Verbs: Hiphil

Hifil has specific prefix Hi. In the imperfect it is always letter patah under the its prefix.

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Hebrew Verbs: Hitpael

Hitpael has specific prefix Hit. It has doubled middle letter in its root (dagesh), in all its forms. In the imperfect shewa is present under the prefix (under taw). Imperfect prefix letter substitutes H in Hitpael prefix.

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Hebrew
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Hebrew Verbs: Hophal

Hofal has specific prefix Ho. Regularly has vowels o-a.

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Hebrew
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Hebrew Verbs: Niphal

Nifal has specific prefix Ni. In the imperfect this prefix is assimilated with imperfect prefix in a way that the first letter of the root is doubled (dagesh).

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Hebrew
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Hebrew Verbs: Piel

Piel has doubled middle letter in its root (dagesh), in all its forms. In the imperfect shewa is present under the prefix.

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Hebrew
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Hebrew Verbs: Pual

Pual has doubled middle letter in its root (dagesh), in all its forms. In the imperfect shewa is present under the prefix. Its same as Piel except for regularity of u-a vowels

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Hebrew
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GGD Verb 1 - Present Active Indicative of λύω

Conjugation of λύω in Present Active Indicative. --- Some other verbs that are declined like λύω: ἄγω, ἀκούω, βάλλω, βλέπω, διδάσκω, ἔχω, λαμβάνω, λέγω.

GGD Verb 2 - Present Active Indicative of φιλέω

Conjugation of φιλέω in Present Active Indicative. φιλέω belongs to a group of verbs called -εω verbs and conjugate like λύω, but the weak -ε at the end of the stem (φιλε-) combine with the vowel of the ending (example φιλε- + ετε = φιλειτε). This combining of vowels is called contraction....

GGD Verb 4 - Future Active Indicative

Future Active Indicative of λύω, βλέπω, βαπτίζω and ἀνοίγω.

GGD Verb 5 - Imperfect Active Indicative

Imperfect Active Indicative of λύω. Imperfect does not mean "faulty" or "defective". One can think of it as "not completed". Imperfect is one of the past tenses in Greek. So the imperfect tense can be thought of as a process in the past, that maybe was not completed. The process in the past...

GGD Verb 6 - First Aorist Active Indicative

The aorist active indicative is the most common verb form in the New Testament. It is commonly used when a story is told. Some examples of aorist verbs translated to English: he blessed he ate he divided

I am!

Learn the present indicative forms of the verb 'to be' (εἰμί).

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Greek
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