Cascadia Syntax Graphs of the New Testament: Glossary provides brief and accessible definition to the labels and terms used in the Cascadia Syntax Graphs of the New Testament. Despite its name, it may also be used effectively for understanding the labels and definitions in The Cascadia Syntax Graphs of the LXX Deuterocanon/Apocrypha because the framework used in the analysis is identical.
For the full collection of Greek syntax resources, check out the Cascadia Greek Syntax Collection: Graphs and Datasets (2019)
“At the clause level, four basic types of clauses have been distinguished: Clause (Verbal), Verbless Clause, Verb Elided Clause, and Minor Clause.” (source)
“The clause represents a grammatical unit that expresses a proposition.” (source)
“ describe the functions of clause level constituents is purposely conservative” (source)
“Second Object Function: Some verbs take two objects. There are two main types. The first type involves two accusative objects in the Greek, an object of person (the first object) and an object of thing (the second object). For example, he will teach you (object of person) all things (object of thing). The second type also involves two accusative objects in the Greek, but the first is the direct object and the second is an object complement. The object complement predicates a description of the direct object (e.g., ‘king’ is the object complement in ‘God appointed David as king’).” (source)
“Verbal Function: A constituent that represents the action/event of a proposition. In verbal clauses, this is the head of the clause, on which all other clause constituents depend.” (source)