(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) Hello, this is Pastor Steven Anderson from Faithful Word Baptist Church in Tempe, Arizona, and today we're going to talk about conjugating verbs, and I just want to basically expose you to the concept of conjugating verbs, and we're going to conjugate our first verb, just a basic present tense, indicative, active verb here, okay? This is pretty much the most basic, the easiest verb conjugation that you're going to learn in Greek. Later on we're going to be learning all kinds of past tenses and future tenses and subjunctive and just all kinds of crazy stuff, passive voice, middle voice, but for now let's just understand the basics of verb conjugation, and this is a verb that's really, really common, so it's one that you want to know well, and that is the verb eho, alright? And eho means I have. Now when you look up Greek verbs in the dictionary, this is the form that they're going to be in, this first person singular, I have, or I do, or I make, or whatever verb you're looking up, this is the form you're going to find in the dictionary, just that present tense, first person singular, I have form, okay? When we conjugate a verb, what we're doing is we are making it agree with the subject of the sentence in number, in person, etc. So this chart is a chart that I like to use to understand verb conjugations, okay? Now in the first column here we have singular, okay? And in the second column we have plural, alright? So these three words are singular, these three words are plural, okay? Then as far as the horizontal rows, what we have here is first person, second person, and third person, alright? You say what does that mean? Well first person is I, first person singular is I, first person plural is we, alright? So first person is what I'm talking about myself, a first person narrative is when the narrator is talking from his point of view. So eho means I have, singular first person, alright? Plural first person would be we have, okay, there's more than one of us. That would be echomen, alright? So we have eho, echomen, alright? That's the difference between singular and plural. Second person means you. Now in Greek there is a differentiation made between you singular and you plural. Now in contemporary English we just say you, whether it's plural, whether it's singular, we don't differentiate. But in the language of the King James Bible for example there is a differentiation made because thou is the singular you and ye is the plural you. And whenever you're reading the Bible and you come across the words that start with a th, thee, thou, thine, thy, those are all singular. And all the ones that start with a y, ye, you, your, your, those are all going to be plural, which is great because you don't lose the meaning that way. Because a lot of verses it makes a difference whether the you is singular or plural. Greek makes that distinction. The King James Bible makes that distinction. The way that we talk today, we've lost that distinction. A lot of people complain about the King James Version because of the thes and the thows, but honestly they do affect the meaning. And so it's great that we have the thes and the thows in our language in the King James Bible. So this right here, second person singular would be thou and second person plural would be ye. So this is you singular, you plural. This word is pronounced ejis and this is pronounced ejete, all right? So ejete and ejis are the second person, you singular plural. Then we have third person. Third person is when we're talking about someone else. So this would be he, she, or it has. He, she, or it has is ejis, all right, ejis. And then they have would be ejusi, ejusi, all right? So we just wanna make sure that our verb matches our subject in person and in number, all right? If it didn't match, it would be like if I said I has, I has, or he have. It wouldn't sound right. It has to match. I have, he has, okay? So ejo, ejis, eji, ejomen, ejete, ejusi. Now a lot of the verbs are gonna follow this exact pattern and have these same endings. This ois, i, omen, ete, usi. So you wanna learn those endings. These six endings are very important. Now I wrote down here at the bottom also the infinitive, which would be to have, all right, which would be ekhin, all right? In English, this would be the dictionary form. In most languages, the infinitive is the dictionary form, but not in Greek. Person singular is gonna be the dictionary form, ejo, all right? So when you're learning verbs on flashcards or something, it's always gonna be that first person form, okay? So this is for koiné Greek. This is Biblical Greek, all right? Now in modern Greek, a couple of these endings have changed just a little bit, okay? Most of them are the same, ois, i, omen, ete, usi, all right? This one's gonna be the same. This one's gonna be the same. This one's gonna be the same. Now the first person plural is gonna be different in modern Greek. In modern Greek, this word is going to be echome, all right? So there's not a real big difference between echomen and echome. When you pronounce them, it doesn't really sound that different. So it's pretty easy to recognize this word in modern Greek even if you just know Biblical Greek. So just wanted to point that out to you that there's a slight difference in that one. This one is the same, again, in modern Greek. This ending, again, is a little bit different. Instead of that usi ending, it becomes an oon ending, all right? So that would be that word right there. But here's the thing, though. You're gonna wanna, if your main interest is reading the Bible, you know, these are the six that you're gonna wanna memorize and focus on, okay? If your main interest is speaking modern Greek, well, you know, then you're gonna wanna know these two words as well, these two endings. But honestly, if you went to Greece and used these words, people are gonna understand you just fine, okay? Because they're not that different. It's very similar, modern Greek and Biblical Greek. Yes, there are differences, but, you know, four of the six are identical and then the two that are different, well, they just aren't that different. And then also in modern Greek, you don't use the infinitive. They have a different way of handling that. So anyway, I just wanted to expose you to the concept of conjugating verbs. Very important that you memorize these endings because you're gonna be able to use these with a lot of other verbs. And I'll bet you if you go back over some of the lessons we've already done, and as you watch future lessons, if you look out for these endings in the verbs, you're going to see them when we're in the, you know, active, indicative, present tense, okay? Just the basic, I have, you have, okay? So again, remember that, that letter he is that, is that hard H sound, he. So this is echo, echis, echi, echomen, echite, echusi. Hopefully you're writing these down and drawing this chart and practicing. In the next video, we're gonna be going over John chapter 6 verse 48, and we're gonna talk more about nouns and the different case endings. We're gonna really break that down for you.