A digital, searchable edition of Herbert Weir Smyth's A Greek Grammar for Colleges (1920) — all 3048 numbered sections (§1–§3048), with polytonic Greek and live cross-references. This is the Greek companion to the site's Woodcock (Latin syntax) and Wheelock references, and is wired into the Greek readers of Historiae.
The interactive reference — all 3048 §§ across Letters & Sounds, Inflection, Formation of Words, and Syntax, searchable by section number, English, or Greek, with cross-references and dialect notes.
The heart of the grammar and the true Woodcock parallel: cases, the moods and tenses, conditions, the infinitive and the participle (e.g. the genitive absolute, §2070).
The comparative table — each construction tied to its Latin authority (Woodcock §§ / Wheelock ch.) and its Greek counterpart (Smyth §§): ablative absolute ∥ genitive absolute, and more.
The full comparison — syntax, morphology, semantics, pragmatics, vocabulary — anchored on Smyth + Woodcock and grounded in Whiton, Sihler, Pinkster, Mason, Oniga.
The mirror reference for Latin syntax — Woodcock's A New Latin Syntax illustrated from Cicero. See also the cross-language grammar synergy plan.