For Latin the app Whitaker’s Words has often been a big help. If I see a word I don’t recognize I just plug it into that app and it tells me all kinds,of useful info regardless of if the verb or noun is in an inflected form. Dictionaries often don’t recognize a word in Latin unless you put a noun in its nominative singular form or a verb in its first person active indicative form. Is there something similar to this for Ancient Greek?
If you have an ipad or iphone, the app Attikos will do this for the texts that Attikos makes available.
This url points to a site, with an oration of Lysias loaded into the main screen:
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3atext%3a1999.01.0153%3aspeech%3d1
Play around with it a little, and you will see how to use it to get parsings and definitions.
Here is another url for the same site: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/morph
Again, one must play around with it a little to see how it works.
Thanks much!
Have you tired logeion?
https://logeion.uchicago.edu/λόγος
You click the link on the right hand of the page to get morphological help “Consult Μορφώ”.
Eulexis
It is a specialized tool to analyze Greek texts, both online and offline versions.
- open the website
- enter any form of the word into “Lemmatise a Greek text” field, e.g. φιλέεις.
- see the lemma φιλέω below.
For an unknown reason, the field “Search for a lemma” doesn’t work.
Alpheios
This website has an integrated morphology analyzer. You need to open any text in the collection, for example this. Chose a magnifying glass icon in the right, and enter the word you want to analyze.
Additionally, it provides full conjugation tables (screenshot).
Offline
You can download a dictionary from latin-dict.github.io collection and use it on your desktop computer or mobile phone.
Those are really handy, thanks guys!