he gives examples for 4 whose origin i was not able to discover. i note that in andanw both things may happen eadon for the aorist and hndanon for the imperfetc or eandon as he gives in the example. (im reading these things in several ways, in one, "it happens in some cases", another, "one may choose", except for 4 which has the first as a clear meaning by the examples he shows - a clarification on this matter will be helpfull)
- verbs beggining with p regularly double... those with l m v or c might get the doubvle
- verbs with a lost consonant f or c may take the consonantal augment instead of the syllabic
- initial c implies contractions (exo => eixov)
- initial f contraction may or may not take place
thus the question is, how can i know when such things happens. in any case, how can i form the imperfect. and in a simillar manner and spirit, how to form the pluperfect, which follows similar rules. ( e to the reduplicated stem, if it starts with a consonant, usually nothing otherwise)
edit: (should i bother with the future perfects or just ignore them?)