↑ magalia.wiki
Reference · Greek & Latin grammar

Grammar & Reference

The reference grammars for ancient Greek and Latin — Smyth, Woodcock, Wheelock — and the comparative landscape between them. Every section deep-links into the live editions and readers.

Greek — Smyth

Smyth's Greek Grammar — 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.

Greek Grammar — the hub

The Greek-grammar cluster: the digital edition of Smyth's A Greek Grammar for Colleges (1920), wired into the Greek readers.

Grammar across the languages — Woodcock ∥ Wheelock ∥ Smyth

The comparative table: each construction tied to its Latin authority (Woodcock §§ / Wheelock chapter) and its Greek counterpart (Smyth §§), every reference a live deep-link.

Latin — Woodcock & Wheelock

Latin syntax — Woodcock, from Cicero

Woodcock's A New Latin Syntax illustrated from Cicero — the mirror reference to Smyth, the language of Roman law in action.

Wheelock's Latin — companion

Companion to Wheelock (6th ed. rev., LaFleur 2005), the textbook behind Happy Latin, wired into the reader.

Latin tutors

Per-topic tutor pages — nominal morphology, the verbal system, syntactic patterns.

Cicero Reader — the hub

The Latin teaching cluster: the interactive reader, the in-Latin syntax reference, the Verrines unit and the tutors.

Comparative — Greek & Latin together

Comparative Greek & Latin grammar

The full comparison across five dimensions — syntax, morphology, semantics, pragmatics, vocabulary — anchored on Smyth + Woodcock and grounded in Whiton, Sihler, Pinkster, Mason, Oniga.

Comparative grammar — the hub

The portal to the comparative cluster: 129 comparanda across the five dimensions, with citations.

↑ Back to magalia.wiki