MA (Ancient Languages), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusThis dissertation investigates the Aorist Indicative as a past tense. In the majority of cases when the Aorist Indicative is used, it refers to some past perfective action. However, there are exceptions in which it seems that the Aorist Indicative refers to a non-past perfective action. These apparent exceptions led some recent scholarship to conclude that the Aorist Indicative does not refer to the past tense, but merely to a perfective aspect. However, the majority of scholarship rejects this novel notion. This dissertation is a new attempt to explain these apparent exceptions of the Aorist Indicative. This dissertation employs Cutrer’s model, which is rooted in Fauconnier...