
Explains the Greek indefinite article for singular nouns, with nominative enna, mia, enna and accusative nan, mia, enna. Feminine and neuter are the same, masculine differs in accusative.
Explore the fourth usage of the accusative, which expresses time without prepositions for parts of the day, days, months, seasons, and years in Greek.
Explore how Greek adjectives agree with nouns in gender, number, and case, forming masculine, feminine, and neuter endings and declining adjectives like nouns with nominative and accusative examples.
Learn how to compare in Greek using pio to express more, with oppo for than, and the accusative after apo; practice examples like Maria is more beautiful than Ana.
Review Greek ordinals from first to tenth and their agreement as adjectives with nouns in number, gender, and case, with examples tied to days of the week and alphabet.
Explore the Greek verb to be and its singular and plural forms. Review examples with ego, you, he, we, and they, and learn negatives and questions by rising tone.
study the a verbs in Greek, formed from a stem and person endings; using meno plus endings such as o, e, uma, un, the ending marks the subject.
Explore the verb I like in Greek grammar, focusing on its nominative structure, using singular for one item and plural for many, and forming 'I like to' phrases with na.
Learn to form the imperative for irregular Greek verbs by combining the subjunctive stem with the imperative endings, use singular and plural forms, and apply negative subjunctive and accent-shift rules.
Master the future tense and future subjunctive of regular Greek verbs, learn stem changes, and practice with examples like read, listen, buy, open, travel, and cook.
Explore the Greek past tense for regular verbs, using the subjunctive stem and past endings rsa, am et, un, with accent on the third-to-last syllable; note two-syllable verbs require epsilon.
Learn the demonstrative pronouns this and that to show near or far people and things. Master three genders masculine, feminine, and neuter, and nominative and accusative forms with examples.
Explain the Greek interrogative pronoun who, its nominative and accusative forms, including singular and plural masculine differences, and usage with prepositions and initial question word order.
Master the interrogative pronoun whose and the possessive δικός μου, with three genders and singular and plural forms, illustrated by examples like whose is the juice and this is mine.
Learn Greek Grammar FAST with this course for Beginner and Intermediate learners: Grammar made simple, easy, and fun!
What you'll learn
Do you struggle to put sentences together?
Want to master Greek Grammar?
This course will explain complex Grammar terms and cover everything, from teaching you how to use a Greek article, to conjugating verbs and forming sentences to express yourself.
44 golden topics with English explanations, exercises, and everything you need to make Grammar look super easy.
Now, the road to mastering Greek isn’t always going to be easy, of course. That’s exactly why we’ve put together this comprehensive guide to Grammar. In this course, we’re going to take you through the first steps of your Greek journey, from the beginner level, showing you Grammar rules that most courses don’t teach! And motivational quotes to help you along the way.
This course will be useful for you if you are not sure how to answer questions like
What is accusative?
How can I speak in the Present, Future, and Past?
What is the subject and the object?
How can I say things in plural?
These and many other questions are answered in this course.
After taking this course you will be able to:
Speak in Greek in everyday situations using the correct structures
Make sentences with ease and put sentences together
Talk in the present, future, and past tense
and much more.
Start your Greek Grammar journey today!
Who is this course for
Anyone who wants to start learning Greek Grammar for any purpose. This course has you covered.
Anyone who wants to boost their Greek Grammar skills - in an easy, fun, and fast way
This course is mainly for beginner students.
Intermediate and advanced students who have problems with Grammar will also find this course useful.
How to work on this course
There are 44 chapters in this course. Each chapter focuses on a particular Grammar topic. including examples, English explanations, and quizzes with exercises at the end of each chapter.
The chapters are not in order of difficulty, so you are not expected to work through the course from beginning to end. Every learner has different problems, so start with the grammar that you find difficult.
It is suggested that you work this way :
find which chapter deals with the grammar point you are interested in
study the explanations and examples
do the exercises at the end of the chapter and check your answers
if your answers are not correct, study again to see what went wrong
So why pick this course?
There are many Greek courses out there. Here’s why this is the best.
Having a solid foundation of Greek Grammar will allow you to easily handle many everyday situations and continue your Greek studies.
It doesn’t just teach you theories. This course has numerous examples, explanations, and rules that most courses don’t teach. It has more than 400 Quiz questions to test your knowledge.
It is designed by a teacher with more than 10 years of experience in teaching Greek Grammar
If you want to master Greek Grammar in a simple, easy, and fun way, this is the course for you.
About the designer of the course
Thanasis is an online Greek teacher, founder of Better Greek website and Better Greek YouTube channel, teaching Greek since 2012. He has helped thousands of students understand complex Greek grammar terms and speak better Greek.