Lesson 1 | The Greek Verbal System
[2] Parts of Verbs
The first thing you should know about verbs is that...
Koine Greek verbs have six parts
Stem: The verb’s lexical core that communicates its meaning (λύω)
Tense-form: How the speaker portrays the verb’s action (aspect - see next step)
Present (λύω - I am untying)
Imperfect (ἔλυον - I was untying)
Aorist (ἔλυσα - I untied)
Future (λύσω - I will untie)
Perfect (λέλυκα - I have untied)
Pluperfect (ἐλελύκειν - I had untied)
Voice: The subject’s relationship to the verb’s action
Active - The subject does the verb’s action (He hits the ball).*
Middle - The subject is affected by the verb’s action (He hits himself).
Passive - The subject receives the verb’s action (He was hit by the ball).
Mood: How the speaker portrays the verb’s relationship to reality**
Indicative - The speaker portrays the verb’s action as a reality (He did this).
Subjunctive - The speaker portrays the verb’s action as a possibility (He might do this).
Imperative - The speaker portrays the verb’s action as a command (Do this!).
Optative***
Person: The speaker’s relation to the verb’s subject
First Person (ἔγω/ἡμεῖς - I/we)
Second Person (σύ/ὑμεῖς - you/you all)
Third Person (all other nouns and pronouns - he, she, it, they, them)
Number: The number of the verb’s subject
Singular (ἔγω/σύ/αὐτός - I/you/he, she, it)
Plural (ἡμεῖς/ὑμεῖς/αὐτοί - we/you all/they, them)
* Note that some verbs (like ἔρχομαι) do not occur in the active voice. You will know this from the verb’s lexical form. When you learn new vocabulary, verbs that end in -ομαι normally occur as middle or passive voice verbs.
*** In Koine Greek, the subjunctive mood had mostly replaced this mood. It does not often occur in the Greek NT.