Features of the Logos Bible Software Edition
The Logos Bible Software compatible version of these texts features the inflected surface form of the text, along with the lemma, morphological analysis, Strong's number, and (in the UBS4 text only) a short English gloss for each word.
Compared to other electronic analytical parsers, one advance in Swanson's analysis is the separation of verbs into three types: finite, infinite, and participial.
These analyzed texts are fully searchable with the Libronix DLS and work with the same reports and tools (Display Information, Verb River, Morphological Greek Search, etc.) as other morphologically analyzed Greek texts offered by Logos. If you already own the NA27, find out why you need UBS4 as well.
From the Preface
This Logos Bible Software edition of the NA27/UBS4 Greek New Testament utilizes fields within the Libronix Digital Library System (LDLS). That is, the LDLS offers the ability to segment certain text and then allows the user to search just that text, or exclude that text from a search.
As most students of the Greek New Testament know, there are several instances of quotes from Old Testament literature within the New Testament. The convention to differentiate these quotations is the use of bold text. Examples of Old Testament passages quoted within the New Testament can be found in Matthew 2:23–4
and Matthew 3:4–6
.
These instances of Old Testament quotations have been encoded as fields within this Logos Bible Software edition of the NA27/UBS4 text. The field name is OTQuote. Therefore, one may now use a search string like "TQuote:ονομα"to locate all instances of the word ονομα within Old Testament quotations.
In addition to the OTQuote field, two other fields have been introduced. These are the DisputedPassage and the LaterAddition fields. Within the NA27/UBS4 text a disputed passage is indicated by single square brackets. Examine Mark 1:1 for an example. Likewise, text that the editors consider to be later additions are indicated by double square brackets. The short and long endings of Mark (Mark 16:8 and Mark 16:9–20) are examples of this.
As always, the Bible text itself is indexed as such and searchable on its own, with or without field syntax. A simple search for a given word will search the entire text, regardless of any underlying field information.
See Also:
Sample Screenshots
Morphological search options for the UBS4-Swanson GNT; a graphical query editor is also available.
A field-limited search for "ονομα" within Old Testament quotations yields 15 hits.

A field-limited search for all disputed passages (DisputedPassage:*) finds all the single-bracketed selections.