Phil,
There are many example of -γραφέω verbs. I think it’s better to leave χαλκογραφοῦσι
Phil,
There are many example of -γραφέω verbs. I think it’s better to leave χαλκογραφοῦσι
Got it, thanks! Those are quite a few -γραφέω verbs, and I wasn’t even aware of them
[no longer necessary]
My pleasure, thank you! Going back to 713, Lewis and Short, in the definition of aclys, point to ἀγκυλίς
Maybe it would be more in the spirit of the text (i.e., change as little as possible), to replace ἀκλίσι with ἀγκυλίσι
Sounds good, thanks. I wish we didn’t have to change anything, but many times already I’ve wondered why a word is used in the Greek.
But I suppose it’s easy for me to say that, with all these online lexica at my fingertips.
[posted by mistake]
Hello. Is this text still available online? The links Phil originally posted are now dead.
Phil has not logged on in a while. I’ll send him an email and ask.
Felipe (Phil) is in Africa. Here is the link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwyQgrJPS6GBbUd6WGNfNl9HZUE/view
Thanks, Randy. I’ve been pulled away by other things for now, but Comenius still often comes to mind. I’ve even wished I could read Czech in order to read his works that are to me sadly inaccessible.
Felipe
Google usually responds to a request to re-scan defective docs.
Link is dead (and following as well), could you re-upload the files?
The link to Randy’s log is dead. Is there another, newer one?
Also, did this project of transcription get lost somewhere?
Try archive.org:
https://web.archive.org/web/20190911111842/http://latinandgreekselftaught.blogspot.com/
I have a link to Randy’s most recent post on Comenius, from February of this year, but I seem to remember some dire threats about posting links in one’s first ten posts . . .
. . . so I’ll put in my eleventh post: https://randygibbonsreflections.com/2021/02/08/comenius-still-useful-or-comenius-comania/
@pavelin & @porphyrios. Thank you both for the links to Randy Gibbons’ posts.
The final transcript of “Janua linguarum reserata, cum graeca versione” is in archive.org.