Present Indicative: Contract Verbs
Why contract? Because, if the stem ends in α, ε or ο, for reasons of fluency of speech, that stem α, ε or ο combines with the ending. In Attic Greek anyway.
Look at English: We say things like "doesn't, won't, he's gone, they've left, the're not here". Why? Because it's easier - for us! That's elision, the Greeks do that too. But they found out that for them, contracting action verbs was also easier. For them!
lives, is living, is dwelling |
|
οἰκέ |
ω |
becomes |
οἰκ |
ῶ |
οἰκέ |
εις |
becomes |
οἰκ |
εῖς |
οἰκέ |
ει |
becomes |
οἰκ |
εῖ |
οἰκέ |
ομεν |
becomes |
οἰκ |
οῦμεν |
οἰκέ |
ετε |
becomes |
οἰκ |
εῖτε |
οἰκέ |
ουσιν |
becomes |
οἰκ |
οῦσιν |
Note
All the endings are regular, only the stem has changed: it has lost its end vowel, ε in this case. And that vowel has combined with the regular endings, lenghtening them. But this ε was an accented έ and the accent has remained with it, changing to a circumflex to let us know that it really is 2 syllables fused into one.
Contraction Rules |
unaccented |
|
accented |
ε + ω |
becomes |
ω |
|
έ + ω |
becomes |
ῶ |
ε + ει |
become |
ει |
έ + ει |
become |
εῖ |
ε + ε |
έ + ε |
ε + ο |
become |
ου |
έ + ο |
become |
οῦ |
ε + ου |
έ + ου |
|