104 A GLOSSARY OF LATER 



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3. In Byzantine Greek, the aorist participle is often used for the future participle. 

 EuNAP. 67, 22 aKpoaadfievov. PrISC. 141, 13 BiaX€^afievov<;. 147, 17. 149, 11 he^afievo<i. 

 147, 19 epurjveva-avTi. 159, 10 ^povpriaavTa<;. 179 Xe^avra. Menand. 308, 9 /3e/3ataj- 

 a-avra^. 345, 21 Tr/aecr/Sei/o-a/xeW. 



§ 87. 



The Moods with "On, "O-rrux;, 'n<{. 



After verbs signifying to say, think, know, believe, hear, see, show, and their syno- 

 nymes, oti, that, negatively on ov (in later and Byzantine Greek also ort yu^'), forms 

 the object (unmediate or remote) of those verbs; the verb following on, being in 

 logical apposition with it. 



1. Sometimes on, takes the aorist optative instead of the future optative. (See above, 

 8 84, 4.) Xen. Hell. 2, 3, 56 '/2? elirev o XdTvpo<i ort, olfj,u)^ec€v el fju-f] aiwTrrjffeiev, eirripeTo, 

 where ol/iw^otro would be more regular, because Satyrus said " olfKo^ei." 3, 2, 23 'Atto- 

 Kpivafiivcov 8e twv HXecav oTt ov iroirjaeiav ravra, .... <f)povpav ecprjvav ol e^opoi : the Eleans 

 said, " ov iroLriaojiev Tavra." 4, 8, 1 IlapefivOovvTO ras iroXet^ to? ovre aKpoTToXec? evTeij(i,<TaLev, 

 edaaie'v re avrovofiov^, for evrei'^iaoiev, eaaotev. 7, 4, 34 Pj'oi'Te? Se . . . . oTt, et Scoaotev 

 evOvvas, KivZwevcreiav airoXeadai ■jre/j.Trovaiv et? Qrj^a^ Kau htZaaicovcn rov<i Otj^uiov; &>?, ei 

 117} (TTparevcreiav, KtvBvvevffaiev ol ApKaSe<; AaKcoviaat, for Kwhvvevaoiev. 



So in later Greek. Eds. 5, 1, p. 202, 37 Nofii^ovrav on .... irepiiaoivTo . . . . , 7) oti 



kvaTTodvavoi rot? ^aadvoi^ ^o^ov efi'Tro irjaete toc<s XotTTOw, for efiTroiTjaoi. 



2. "Ore sometimes precedes an interrogative word in constructions like the following. 

 Apocr. Nicod. Euangel. I, A, 1, 2 Elirari fioi oti ttw? hwajxai eyct) ■l^jejxwv oiv ^aaiXea 

 e^erdaai, ; Epifh. I, 117 D EpcoTw/Mevoi •jrepi, t^? ixapTvpia<; TavT7]<; koI Trj<i vT7o6ea-eco<; oti tivi 

 X07CO KaTCL TO crapKiKov ov ireirXrjpanai, k. t, X. 



3. The subject of a dependent sentence beginning with oti may become the object 

 of the leading sentence ; in which case o t i may be said to be in logical apposition 

 with that object. Apocr. Nicod. Euangel. I, B, 1, 3 EXhov tov<; 'Efipalov; ort eaTpwvwov 

 Iv Tr] 6Ba> TO, IfidTia avTuiv, equivalent to ElBov oti 01 'E^paioi ea-Tpavvvov, k. t. X. 



4. Sometimes oti, or tov oti,, depends on a preposition. Theod. Ill, 527 D Tlepl 



fiev ovv OTI 6 utos TOV Oeov ovTe ef ovk ovtwv yeyevrjTai, ovts tjv ttotb ore ovk rjv, avTdpKr]<; -TvaiBev- 

 aai 'ladvvr]^ 6 evajjeXiaTt]';. JoAN. Ant. 159 A Ilepl tov oti 01 to, fiovacrT7]pia Bia Bcopeav 

 Xap,^dvovTe^ .... dae^ovcnv. 



5. When oti stands at the beginning of a paragraph, we must supply a verb (as 

 ta-01,), or laTeov. Laod. passim. Porph. Adm. 270. Cedr. I, 296. 



