Koine-Greek.com is a space online for discussions of linguistics and
especially Ancient Greek grammar. Most of the time, we are interested in
the Koine period of the language from roughly 200 BCE to 300 CE. Our
goal is to make technical linguistics research accessible and available
for students and scholars of Ancient Greek.
We are primarily interested in studying Ancient Greek using
approaches to language structure that are cognitively &
typologically robust, as well as those designed particularly for
descriptive grammar writing. However, we are experienced in a wide
variety of theoretical approaches.
Koine-Greek.com uses Amazon Affiliated Links in order to cover site hosting costs.
The authors
Mike Aubrey is Language Editor for Logos Bible
Software. He specializes applied linguistics, historical linguistics,
West Coast Functional theories of language, and verbal semantics. The
majority of his research is in Hellenistic and Koine Greek. He is also
the Greek Languages and Linguistics Moderator for the B-Greek forums.
Rachel Aubrey specializes in cognitive linguistics,
Role and Reference Grammar, metaphor theory, and historical linguistics.
She is particularly interested in grammatical voice systems, polysemy,
and cognitive construal.
Chris Fresch is Lecturer
in Biblical Languages and Old Testament at the Bible College of South
Australia. His current research interests are in Hebrew and Greek
linguistics and Septuagint.
Andrew Keenan
is a Library Assistant and Adjunct Professor at Lancaster Bible College
in Lancaster, PA. He is a recent graduate of Gordon-Conwell Theological
Seminary where he earned his M.A. in Old Testament and Biblical
Languages. His research interests include Greek lexicography,
linguistics, and Septuagint.
Kris Lyle (MA in Biblical Languages from
Stellenbosch University) is interested in Lexical Semantics
(lexicology), Biblical Hebrew and Greek linguistics, prepositions,
embodied cognition, information structure, discourse analysis,
cognitive linguistics, grammaticalization, and ANE conceptions of the
sacred/holy. He also enjoys disc golf, writing and the outdoors.
Steve Runge serves as a Scholar-in-Residence at
Logos Bible Software. He has a Doctor of Literature degree in Biblical
Languages from the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa,
supervised by Christo Van der Merwe. He currently serves as a research associate affiliated with the Department of Ancient Studies, University of Stellenbosch.
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