
vir litterarum wrote:and she keeps referring to αá½Ï„ός as a postpositive.
annis wrote:vir litterarum wrote:and she keeps referring to αá½Ï„ός as a postpositive.
To be clear, it's the oblique cases being used as a pronoun that are postpositive.
I don't know who the first scholar to notice this was.
Bert wrote:Concerning the word oblique, is oblique anything but nominative (and vocative I guess) or anything but nominative and accusative?
I can't recall having seen the genitive of autos as first in the sentence but I think I remember seeing it ahead of the noun it modifies. Being postpositive is only in reference to its position in the sentence and not in relation to its noun?
Users browsing this forum: Baker and 32 guests