Abstract: A Greek construction in which the verb is in the 3rd sg. form, while the subject is in the 3rd pl. and, in most cases, in post\u2013verbal position, is called Pindar\u2019s scheme inasmuch as it occurs most frequently in the poems of this author. Various explanations have been provided for this construction and it has also been interpreted as an error. The paper is an attempt at an overall syntactic explanation of the available data
The aim of this paper is twofold: on the one hand, we will try to determine the reasons why Pindar’s...
Vanséveren Sylvie. Albert Rljksbaron, The Syntax and Semantics of the Verb in Classical Greek : an I...
Δέ is one of the most frequently attested particles in Ancient Greek. Recent studies, most of which...
Abstract: A Greek construction in which the verb is in the 3rd sg. form, while the subject is in th...
Donnet Daniel. Thomas K. Hubbard, The Pindaric Mind. A Study of Logical Structure in Early Greek Poe...
This paper explores the role of ambiguity in Pindar’s Pythian 3. It argues that ambiguity is a strat...
The aim of this paper is to outline an interpretation of three Pindaric Odes which recount from thre...
If Pindar used any interaction between musical and accentual melos, there should be positions displa...
Over the last decade a growing number of scholars have questioned the veracity of the longstanding c...
The Isthm . 5. 56–58 is one of the few highly controversial cruxes in Pindar, though it may be an...
This paper provides a syntactic analysis of two types of compounds in Greek: synthetic and phrasal c...
The starting point of the author's reflections is the doubling of objects - a construction which is ...
This paper is organized as follows: the first section sketches the theoretical background involved i...
Scholars generally assume that Olympian 1, 1 – 7 and Bacchylides 3, 85 – 87 contain priamels. I argu...
Specialists of the history of Ancient Greek scholarship and modern-day sociolinguists alike have mad...
The aim of this paper is twofold: on the one hand, we will try to determine the reasons why Pindar’s...
Vanséveren Sylvie. Albert Rljksbaron, The Syntax and Semantics of the Verb in Classical Greek : an I...
Δέ is one of the most frequently attested particles in Ancient Greek. Recent studies, most of which...
Abstract: A Greek construction in which the verb is in the 3rd sg. form, while the subject is in th...
Donnet Daniel. Thomas K. Hubbard, The Pindaric Mind. A Study of Logical Structure in Early Greek Poe...
This paper explores the role of ambiguity in Pindar’s Pythian 3. It argues that ambiguity is a strat...
The aim of this paper is to outline an interpretation of three Pindaric Odes which recount from thre...
If Pindar used any interaction between musical and accentual melos, there should be positions displa...
Over the last decade a growing number of scholars have questioned the veracity of the longstanding c...
The Isthm . 5. 56–58 is one of the few highly controversial cruxes in Pindar, though it may be an...
This paper provides a syntactic analysis of two types of compounds in Greek: synthetic and phrasal c...
The starting point of the author's reflections is the doubling of objects - a construction which is ...
This paper is organized as follows: the first section sketches the theoretical background involved i...
Scholars generally assume that Olympian 1, 1 – 7 and Bacchylides 3, 85 – 87 contain priamels. I argu...
Specialists of the history of Ancient Greek scholarship and modern-day sociolinguists alike have mad...
The aim of this paper is twofold: on the one hand, we will try to determine the reasons why Pindar’s...
Vanséveren Sylvie. Albert Rljksbaron, The Syntax and Semantics of the Verb in Classical Greek : an I...
Δέ is one of the most frequently attested particles in Ancient Greek. Recent studies, most of which...