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JAMES STRONG
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Page 4
§ 93. Accusative, denoting direction, answering to Whither? and expressed by toward.
§ 94. "Local" involving the boundary, place, or object of motion, especially with εἰς.
§ 95. "Causal," involving an influence, change, or result, as impressed upon the object, as follows:--
§ 96. The effect, either the thing effected, an attribute of the effect, or the effect intended.
§ 97. The object acted upon, e.g., with directly transitive verbs, those expressing a good or bad influence, patience, swearing, sometimes a mental affection, etc.; also the space or way after a verb of motion; the time, (throughout which,) measure, and weight; and finally ("Attributive Accusative") with any verb or adj. (sometimes other words) to define its application more closely, especially if of kindred signification.
Order of Words in a Sentence
§ 98. This is usually not, as in English, that of grammatical dependence, but rather the order of thought; important or emphatic words come first, after the connecting particles; prepositions and the article precede their nouns; and qualifying terms are grouped in a harmonious balance around the principal ones.
Cf. The Complete Iliad * The Complete Odyssey
Greek Grammar * Basic New Testament Words * Greek - English Interlinear Iliad
Greek accentuation * Greek pronunciation
Reference address : https://ellopos.net/elpenor/lessons/strong6.asp?pg=4