Pharr wrote:The indefinite relative pronoun (ὅστις, ἥτις, ὅ τι) whoever, whichever, whatever, is a compound of the simple relative (ὅς, ἥ, ὅ) and the indefinite τὶς, τὶ, each part of which is declined separately (or sometimes only the latter part).
He does not then give the actual declension. Would this be the correct way to decline it:
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ὅστις ἥτις ὅ τι
οὗτεο ἧστεο οὗτεο
ὡτέῳ ἡτέῳ ὡτέῳ
ὅντινα ἥντινα ὅ τι
ὥτινε ὥτινε ὥτινε
οἱιντίνοιιν οἱιντίνοιιν οἱιντίνοιιν
οἵτινες αἵτινες ἅτινα
ὡντέων ὡντέων ὡντέων
οἱσιτέοισι ἡσιτέοισι οἱσιτέοισι
οὕστινας ἅστινας ἅτινα
I'm really not sure about words like "οἱιντίνοιιν" and would really like to check on this. I did look it up in Goodwin's Elementary Greek Grammar, but that had a much different declension that didn't follow Pharr's statement and I'm assuming it's an attic/epic difference.

