Here are the forms of the Greek article:
masc |
fem |
neut |
|
nom sg |
ὁ |
ἡ |
τό |
gen sg |
τοῦ |
τῆς |
τοῦ |
dat sg |
τῷ |
τῇ |
τῷ |
acc sg |
τόν |
τήν |
τό |
nom pl |
οἱ |
αἱ |
τά |
gen pl |
τῶν |
τῶν |
τῶν |
dat pl |
τοῖς |
ταῖς |
τοῖς |
acc pl |
τούς |
τάς |
τά |
The following are some important facts to remember about the use of the article:
- The article must agree with its noun, adjective, participle, etc; see principle 7.
- The article is often used as a possessive pronoun; see principle 18.
- Names of persons usually omit the article. Yet they often take it to mark them as before mentioned (anaphoric) or well known; see principle 15.
- Abstract nouns often take the article; principle 28.
- The article has a demonstrative force before μεν and δε in expressing contrast.
- Nouns modified by demonstrative pronouns are nearly always articular; the pronoun either preceding the article or following the noun.
- There is no indefinite article in Greek. The English “a” or “an” must therefore usually be omitted in translation πολις, a city. When the writer has in mind some particular person or thing but does not name it the indefinite pronoun τις is used. source