12 Technical Knowledge Grammar
12 Technical Knowledge Grammar
12 Technical Knowledge Grammar
Dionysius Thrax
1. Grammar
Grammar is the practical3 knowledge of the language used, for the most part, by verse and
prose writers. There are six parts to it. First, reading aloud according to prosody.4 Second,
explanation according to existing usage among writers. Third, the useful rendering of words
and their meanings. Fourth, the discovery of etymology. Fifth, account of grammatical
paradigms. Sixth, appraisal of written works, which is the finest of all parts in the system.
2. Reading
Reading is the fluent rendering of poetry and prose. It must be done with expression,
prosody and measure. From the expression we see the worth of the piece, from the prosody
the skill (of the reader), from the measure the mind (of the writer). Thus, our reading of
tragedy is heroic, comedy conversational, elegies light, epic emphatic, lyric harmonious,
dirges subdued and mournful. For non-observance of these destroys the virtues of the poets
3. Accent
Accent is the harmonious resonance of the voice: rising with the acute, even with the grave
4. Punctuation
There are three punctuation marks: full stop, medial stop and comma. The full stop indicates
a completed thought, the medial a pause for breath and the comma a thought that is not yet
4 One of the scholiasts explains this term as: (see later on p. 679) and says that it has four parts:
'accents, times, breathings and emotions'complete or lacking.
The difference is time. The distance conveyed by the full stop is great, by the comma quite
small.
6. Rhapsody
Rhapsody is the part of the poem that involves a certain subject.5 It has been called
rhapsody, a sort of 'staff song', from the fact that those who went around with the laurel
7. Element7
There are twenty-four letters, from alpha to omega. Letters are said to be formed by lines
and scratches.8 The ancients considered writing a form of scratching.9 The same are called
A syllable is properly a combination of consonant with vowel(s), such as K£r, boῦj (ox).
9. Long syllable
A long syllable occurs in eight ways, three by nature, five by position. By nature, either
when it is formed by the long elements, such as ἥrwj (hero); or when one of the two
position, when it ends in two consonants, such as ἅlj (salt); or when a short or shortened
vowel is followed by two consonants, such as ἀgrόj (fierce); or when it ends in a single
consonant and the following syllable begins with a consonant, such ἔrgon (work); or when
it introduces a double consonant, ἓxw (I will have); or when it ends in double consonant,
A short syllable occurs in two ways: either when it has a naturally short vowel; or when it
has one of the long-short vowels that is changed into a short vowel, such as Ἄrhj
A common vowel occurs in three ways: either when it ends in a long vowel and is followed
by a vowel, or when a short or shortened vowel is preceded by two consonants, of which the
second is unchanging and the first is voiceless, or when, being short, it concludes a part of speech12 and
is followed by a vowel.
12. Word
13. Sentence
A sentence is the combination of words in prose and verse that exhibits a complete thought.
There are eight parts of speech: noun, verb, participle, article, pronoun, adverb and
14. Noun
A noun is a declinable part of the sentence indicating a physical entity, such as lίqoj
ἄnqrwpoj (man), ἵppoj (horse), or particular, such 'Socrates', 'Plato'. It has five
15. Verb
The verb is a word without cases and indicates tense, person and and number, presenting
numbers, persons, conjugations. There are five moods: indicative, imperative, optative,
subjunctive and infinitive. There are three voices: active, passive and middle, in the active
such verbs as tUptw (I strike), passive tUptomai (I am struck), the middle sometimes
active and sometimes passive, such as pšpoiqa (I have believed/I believe), dišfqora (I
have destroyed/been destroyed', ἐpois£mhn (I did for myself) and ἐgray£mhn (I wrote for
myself).
16. Conjugation
Conjugation is the sequential inflection of verbs. There are six conjugations of barytone25
verbs. The first is introduced by b or f or p or pt, such as leίbw, grάfw, tέrpw, kόptw
(pour, write, please, cut). The second is introduced by g or k or c or kt, such as lέgw,
plέkw, trέcw, tίktw (say, plait, run, bear). The third is introduced by d or q or t, such as
°dw, pl≫qw, ¢nUtw (sing, be full, finish). The fourth is introduced z or double s, such as
frάzw, nUssw, NrUssw (say, pierce, dig). The fifth is introduced by the four unchanging
ones, l, m. n, r, such as pάllw, nέmw, krίnw, speίrw (swing, tend, judge, sow) and the sixth by a vowel,
such as ἱppeUw, basileUw, ¢koUw (ride, reign, hear). Some add a
There are three conjugations of circumflex verbs. The first is expressed in the second and
third person by the diphthong ei, such as noῶ (apprehend), noeῖj, noeῖ; the second by the
diphthong ᾳ, such as boῶ (shout), boᾷj, boᾷ; the third by the diphthong oi, such as
Of the verbs ending in mi there are four conjugations. The first is derived from the first of
the circumflex verbs, tίqhmi (put) from tiqῶ; the second from the second circumflex,
ἵsthmi (stand) from ἵstῶ; the third from the third circumflex, dίdwmi (give) from didῶ, the
fourth from the sixth of the barytone type, p ≫gnumi (fix) from phgnUw.
19. Participle
A participle is word that partakes of the property of nouns and verbs. Its endings are those
20. Article
The article is a declinable part of the sense, prefixed and suffixed to the declension of nouns.
21. Pronoun
A pronoun is a word used instead of a noun and indicates defined persons. It has six
The primary pronouns are ἐge, sU, ἴ, with their derivatives ἐmόj, sόj and ὅj. The classes
of these pronouns are not distinguished through the word itself, but through what they refer
to, such as ἐge and the derivatives ὁ ἐmόj, ἡ ἐmh, to ἐmόn. The numbers of the primary
pronouns are: singular, ἐge, sU, ἴ; dual, nῶi, sfῶi; plural, ἡmeῖj, ὑmeῖj, sfeῖj;
derivatives, ἐmόj, sόj, ὅj; dual, ἐme, se, ὥ; plural, ἐmo…, so…, oOE.
23. Preposition
A preposition27 is a word placed before all parts of the sentence in composition and syntax.
There are eighteen propositions in total, six monosyllabic, ἔn (in), eἴj (to), ἔx (from), prό
(before), prόj (to), sUn (with), which are not written with anastrophe,28 and twelve
disyllabic, ἀnά (up), katά (down), diά (through), metά (with), parά (beside), ἀntί (in
place of), ἐpί (upon), ἀmfί (around), ἀpo (from), ὑpό (under), ὑpέr (over).
24. Adverb
An adverb is an indeclinable part of the sentence said of a verb or added to a verb. Some of
them are simple, such as pάlai, and some complex,such as prόpalai. Some indicate
time, such as nan, tOte, aὖqij. To these have to be added the words expressive of periods
(meawhile), phnίka (when); those expressive of state,30 such as sofῶj (wisely), kakῶj
(badly), dunatῶj (ably); those expressive of quality, such as pUx (with the fist), lάx (with
the foot), botrudόn (like a bunch of grapes), ¢gelhdόn (like sheep); those expressive of
25. Conjunction
A conjunction is a word that connects thought with order and fills out the empty spaces of