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Greek New Testament and Hebrew Old Testament
To view the Hebrew Old Testament, you must first install the Hebrew font to the Windows/Fonts folder on your desktop computer.
To view the Greek New Testament, you must first install the Greek font to the Windows/Fonts folder on your desktop computer. Newer versions of Netscape or Internet Explorer are also required to display the Greek font. Otherwise, the Greek text will appear in a transliteration format with the mapping shown below.
The Greek New Testament transliteration format is show below. In Greek versions with no accents, a single English letter represents a single Greek letter.
Alpha = a Nu = n
Beta = b Xi = x
Gamma = g Omicron = o
Delta = d Pi = p
Epsilon = e Rho = r
Zeta = z Sigma = s
Eta = h Tau = t
Theta = y Upsilon = u
Iota = i Phi = f
Kappa = k Chi = c
Lambda = l Psi = q
Mu = m Omega = w
Final Sigma = " (double quote)
To search for a Greek word in Greek New Testament, either type the word in the Search box in transliteration format, or copy and paste the Greek characters from a verse into the search field. Remember the search is sensitive to capital letters and accents.
The purpose of studying the New Testament Greek is to better equip us all to be able to dig out many of the hidden riches in the Word of God. Many words, phrases, and paragraphs in the New Testament cannot adequately be understood without some knowledge of Koine (Biblical) Greek.
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789~!@#$%^&*()_+|{}:"<>?`-=\[];',./