Comments - Conversational Greek - eLatin eGreek eLearn2024-03-28T23:47:51Zhttps://eclassics.ning.com/profiles/comment/feed?attachedTo=727885%3ABlogPost%3A17645&xn_auth=noI suspect you have heard abou…tag:eclassics.ning.com,2009-07-13:727885:Comment:359282009-07-13T13:37:10.040ZKeith Rogershttps://eclassics.ning.com/profile/KeithRogers
I suspect you have heard about this already but W.H.D.Rouse's Direct Method materials on the teaching of Greek ‘A Greek Boy at Home’ and his ‘First Greek Course’ are being revised by Anne Mahoney at Tufts University and are to be published by Focus -- http://www.pullins.com – early in 2010. I am hoping to use them as the basis of a TPRS beginners Greek course.
I suspect you have heard about this already but W.H.D.Rouse's Direct Method materials on the teaching of Greek ‘A Greek Boy at Home’ and his ‘First Greek Course’ are being revised by Anne Mahoney at Tufts University and are to be published by Focus -- http://www.pullins.com – early in 2010. I am hoping to use them as the basis of a TPRS beginners Greek course. i've got one thing you can tr…tag:eclassics.ning.com,2009-01-23:727885:Comment:307452009-01-23T00:25:56.282Zmaximushttps://eclassics.ning.com/profile/maximus
i've got one thing you can try, especially if your students have some latin: You could build conversations from the Hermeneumata Pseudodositheana.<br />
It's the way the Hellenistic Greek speakers quickly got up to speed coping with the new Roman beaurocacy.<br />
http://www.hs-augsburg.de/~harsch/Chronologia/Lspost03/Dositheus/dos_col0.html
i've got one thing you can try, especially if your students have some latin: You could build conversations from the Hermeneumata Pseudodositheana.<br />
It's the way the Hellenistic Greek speakers quickly got up to speed coping with the new Roman beaurocacy.<br />
http://www.hs-augsburg.de/~harsch/Chronologia/Lspost03/Dositheus/dos_col0.html