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53 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best NT Greek Vocab Cards Ever,
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
Keeping it simple: Buy these cards!
Zondervan's Greek vocabulary cards are dramatically superior to the VisEd cards. The printing is in a large easy to read font and the card size is just right. For those familiar with the VisEd vocab cards, these are about 1/4 of an inch higher and about 1/4 of an inch narrower. This makes the cards much easier to hold and flip through. Mastering the vocabulary on these cards is absolutely essential to reading the Greek NT. One of the "lies" I was told in Seminary was that you only needed to learn those words used 50 times or more. If you follow that advice, you will need to carry a dictionary with you everywhere you take your Greek NT. The joy and usefulness of NT Greek depends on your memorising all the words used 10 or more times in the NT - and these cards from Zondervan make it easier than ever to do just that.
29 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Greek Flash Cards Helpful,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
I have been amazed at how helpful Mounce's Greek flash cards have been. Actually, this is my second set of cards because I previously used the cards that came with Parson's Greek Tutor software. In fact, the usefulness of the Parson's cards led me to buy Mounce's much larger set.
Mounce's cards are both more numerous (a thousand instead of about 150) and more detailed listing different word forms and word frequencies in the NT. Mounce's cards also tie in with his grammar book. My cheerfulness about the cards arises because I can review a few words in time that is normally lost. I leave the cards next to my computer and pick them up when I am waiting for the computer to boot or download. They also good for reviewing when you are stuck on the phone for long periods of time. More to the point, reviewing these cards has helped me focus on vocabulary independent of text. I am prone to skim over NT passage with an interlinear text and be too easily content to know the gist of the sentence than the meaning of particular words outside the context. The cards help me focus on that weakness in my study. Stephen
31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Vocabulary Tool,
By
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
I wish I had ignored the advice of my Greek professor and purchased these cards from the outset of my second year of Greek. These cards are great for vocabulary memorization and review. A great feature is the size of the cards (different and easier to handle than the Vis-Ed cards) and the inclusion of the principal parts on the verb cards. Buying a set of these would have saved me a lot of unnecessarily spent time creating my own cards (I have a wife and four kids and better things to do with my time). Fortunately, for the rest of the year I can do other things with the extra time I'll save.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Helpful,
By L. Steubing "durable apostle" (DFW Metroplex, Texas United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
While these vocabulary cards are not an essential to learning Greek, it is a great help. With 1000 words, it beats having to write you own cards, and offers frequency of appearance of each word, along with the genitive case ending. They have been worth every cent.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Just a quick few words of caution...,
By B. Marold "Bruce W. Marold" (Bethlehem, PA United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 100 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
I am just starting out on a journey to teach myself NT Greek and I purchased a set of these cards without also purchasing the author's text. I strongly suggest you get both, as the cards are much more useful with the text, to which they are indexed.
I must also not that these cards are NOT printed to flip in the most logical way, top edge back to reveal the English translation of the Greek word. Instead, they must be flipped the more awkward side edge to the back to reveal the properly positioned English. I was also just a bit disappointed that there was no more complete information on the parts of speech on the cards, but then, I expect that will all be revealed in the text, which I have just ordered.
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Where are the verbal roots....?,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
These cards are great for learning vocabulary. However, William Mounce, as part of his "system" for learning verbs, stresses the exact memorization of verbal roots as the key to recognizing all the different tense stems. For verbs, these cards list all the different tense stems that occur in the NT, but no verbal roots. In fact, "Basics of Biblical Greek" (the textbook) does not include the verbal roots for any verbs other than those occuring more than 50 times in the NT. Maybe memorization of the roots is not really essential. While it's not a show stopper by any means (you can usually figure out the root) if you are really trying to use the Basics of Biblical Greek "system" for learning verbs these cards lack a key component. Perhaps this is a way to get us all to purchase the Mounce morphology book.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best in Class,
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
The entire study package of Basics of Biblical Greek which includes the textbook, the study guide, the vocabulary cards, the summary sheet, and the lecture CD's is a blessed fruit of a long, thoughtful, meticulous, and high-tech labor of one of the world's best New Testament Greek scholars. I have to admit I have not studied Greek from other professors, but after studying Mounce, I simply can not imagine a better way to teach students an introduction to Biblical Greek than the one Prof. Mounce implements in this study packet. The structure and methodology are so impressively organized that I believe, without trying to diminish the role of an instructor, one can study by himself or herself without taking the class at a seminary. From start to finish, Prof. Mounce designs the lessons with solid exegesis skills as the goal in mind. He wastes no time but immediately exposes students with translation exercises using real Scripture passages in the study guide, even early in the first few chapters when he barely starts with nouns.
The lessons are divided into three major parts; nouns, adjectives and verbs. Each chapter begins with exegetical insights related to the topic being taught in that particular chapter. He then moves on by explaining the English and Greek forms. The nouns and adjectives are not too bad. They are usually divided into three types of declensions. While the nouns usually take on one of the three declensions, the most common configuration of adjectives is either 3-1-3 or 2-1-2 where the first, second and third numbers indicate the declension type for masculine, feminine and neuter genders, respectively. There are some discussions on special-case nouns having slightly abnormal endings; pant and ent, for examples. Now verbs are considerably more challenging because they not only have more numerous categories and rules, but the biggest obstacles are the tense stems and when they form the real verbs through a combination of augments, tense-formatives, connecting vowels, and personal endings. The trouble can be illustrated by comparing it to having to memorize the English present, past and perfect tenses of irregular and regular verbs which the Greek version has six; present, future active, aorist active and passive, perfect active and passive, instead of three in English. And each of these six stems has different forms not only depending on the person and number, but also on the voices; active, middle, and passive. On top of these, there is another parameter, called aspect, where these verbs take on other forms, the indicative covered in the early chapters of the verbs, subjunctive, infinitive and imperative. Some are similar if not the same as the indicatives, which make them even harder to distinguish which one is which. Here Prof. Mounce reminds students to always watch for the contexts. Context is your best friend when it comes to translation. There is no easy way of getting around this issue completely except in my view, to get the Greek Morphology text, also by Mounce. At the end of some chapters, there is coverage on extended materials that deal with special cases, additional rules in translation, contraction and morphology. The summary sheet consists of all important rules involving word formation, verb-ending charts, and all the forms of frequently used verbs. It serves as a handy guide for students when doing the translation so they don't have to flip through the pages of the textbook. Some flipping of pages is inevitable, though, because the last few pages of the textbook has the list of major lexicons. There are two types of drills in the study guide. The first is chapter-by-chapter review where students are asked to parse ten words in a table having the forms that have been covered up to that chapter. Next, there is a warm-up translation section consisting of seven short phrases or sentences to be translated before the real translation exercise begins with twenty sentences; some are long ones. From my experience, I sometimes had a headache after completing the translation work due to the intensity it involves in figuring out not only what the words mean, but also their forms, and how to restructure the sentence in English format that both are understandable and make sense. The second type of drill is the exam-type where the test materials are combined every five chapters. The tasks include parsing, grammar rules, and translations usually from a New Testament passage. As in any other languages, learning Greek requires extra memory power, but not brute-force memorization of every single word indiscriminately. Prof. Mounce always warns students only to memorize special-case words and rules such as endings and contractions, instead of every single word with all its garden variety of forms. Excellent advice. Needless to say, I delightfully endorse Prof. Mounce as your virtual Greek instructor. If you decide to homeschool yourself, you can purchase the complete combo set at teknia dot com. I don't think Amazon sell the lecture CD set. But even if you are taking the class at the seminary, I don't see any harm for you to buy the combo set anyway, though you probably won't need the lecture CD's provided you have an excellent instructor.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well done,
By
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
Actually, I would recommend making your own vocabulary cards rather than buying pre-printed ones. This is because making your own cards provides your brain with one more channel through which to assimilate the material. However, if you are new to language learning, cards such as these can be a helpful start.
William Mounce has certainly done a competent job with these cards, so you can use them with confidence. The verb cards include the principal parts of the verbs. Be sure to learn them! A thorough knowledge of these will greatly enhance your ability to read Greek with ease.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must Have,
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
If you are using the Mounce textbook for Basic Greek, these cards are a must! They are in the order of the chapters of the book, and they have all the information you need to learn the vocabulary easily and quickly. I carry them around with me on a ring clasp, and they are great! I highly recommend them!
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Basics of Bib Greek Vocab Cards,
By Jerome "yot_driver" (Bay Area, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) (Cards)
Very useful for learning vocabulary. They contain all the words in Mounce's text, and more. They have chapter references which are useful. It's broken down such that the more common words are listed first (in numerical order). Nice large font. The cards are a little small (the size of a business card). It would be useful if they had a key on each card that indicated the part of speech (noun, verb, adverb, etc.). It also might be useful to have them grouped with a ring.
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Basics of Biblical Greek Vocabulary Cards (Zondervan Vocabulary Builder Series, The) by William D. Mounce (Cards - October 26, 2004)
$16.99 $11.23
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