7o6 



CLASSICAL DECLKNSrciXS AND CON T UCATK )NS. 



Table II. CONSPECTUS OF GREEK PERSON 



ENDINGS. 



(For Latin, cp. V\'^. I\\, 1.) 



N.B. — Note tlie correspondence ol tlie personal post-positions (sing, and 

 plur.) with yLie, ae, to ; and the lisping modifications in the imperative. 



* Lengthened in Subj. 



tThus also in 2 Aor. and (with a for stem-vowel, except in Sg. 1 and 3) 

 in 1 Aor. and Pf. (PI. 3 dat, Lat. ^re); and with these lengthened in Aor. Pass., 

 exc. Sg. l{6)t]V, PI. 3 {6)r}aai>, and plnpf. The Act. endings are shortened to 

 leave augment and reduplication, when possible, accented. 



* So in Impf. and Aorists (the weak with stem vowel a). So, too,inPlupf. 

 Tliis and the pf. omit thematic vowels in Mid-Pass. 



Table III. CONSPECTUS OF GREEK MOOD 

 AND TENSE FORMATION. 



* Cp. the Latin 2nd person ending in the Plur. Pass. 



