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Future Periphrases in John Malalas

  • Daniel Kölligan
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Postclassical Greek
This chapter is in the book Postclassical Greek

Abstract

The paper discusses the various means of expressing future reference in the earliest Byzantine world chronicle written in a language close to the vernacular. After the demise of the classical future tense formation, both simple present tense forms and periphrastic constructions are employed to this end. Some of the patterns found in Malalas continue pre-Byzantine uses, others are innovations neither found in Classical Greek nor in the later language: the use of the present tense for reference to the future and that of méllō ʻto be aboutʼ as a future-in-the-past are attested already in Classical Greek, whereas the use of ékhō ʻto haveʼ as a future-in-the-past and as a counterfactual is an innovation Malalas shares with other authors of his time. His use of opheílō ‘to owe/shallʼ in the syntactic position where the classical language employs a future participle is not continued in Modern Greek.

Abstract

The paper discusses the various means of expressing future reference in the earliest Byzantine world chronicle written in a language close to the vernacular. After the demise of the classical future tense formation, both simple present tense forms and periphrastic constructions are employed to this end. Some of the patterns found in Malalas continue pre-Byzantine uses, others are innovations neither found in Classical Greek nor in the later language: the use of the present tense for reference to the future and that of méllō ʻto be aboutʼ as a future-in-the-past are attested already in Classical Greek, whereas the use of ékhō ʻto haveʼ as a future-in-the-past and as a counterfactual is an innovation Malalas shares with other authors of his time. His use of opheílō ‘to owe/shallʼ in the syntactic position where the classical language employs a future participle is not continued in Modern Greek.

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