How to Identify Greek Participles in New Testament Greek

Greek participles are among the most important and most frequent verbal forms in the Greek New Testament. A participle is a verbal adjective. It has verbal qualities because it comes from a verb and carries tense-form and voice. It also has adjectival qualities because it has gender, number, and case and may modify a noun, stand substantivally, or describe circumstances connected to a main verb.

Students often struggle with participles because they contain more grammatical information than most forms. A finite verb is parsed for person and number, but a participle is not. A participle must be identified by tense-form, voice, gender, number, and case. For example, λύων is present active participle, masculine nominative singular. The form λύσαντες is aorist active participle, masculine nominative plural. The form λυθείς is aorist passive participle, masculine nominative singular. The form λελυμένος is perfect middle/passive participle, masculine nominative singular.

This lesson teaches students how to identify Greek participles by endings. It covers present, aorist, perfect, and future participles in active, middle, and passive voice, with masculine, feminine, and neuter forms. The goal is to help students recognize participles quickly and parse them accurately while reading the Greek New Testament.

What Is a Participle?

A participle is a verbal adjective. This means it belongs partly to the verb system and partly to the adjective system.

Verbal Features Adjectival Features
Tense-form Gender
Voice Number
May take objects Case
May be modified by adverbs May modify nouns
May express time, cause, means, condition, concession, or attendant circumstance May function substantivally

A participle does not have person. Students should never parse a participle as first person, second person, or third person.

The First Rule: Participles Have Gender, Number, and Case

Because participles function like adjectives, they have gender, number, and case.

Category Question Answered
Gender Masculine, feminine, or neuter?
Number Singular or plural?
Case Nominative, genitive, dative, or accusative?

For example:

  • λύων — masculine nominative singular
  • λύουσα — feminine nominative singular
  • λῦον — neuter nominative or accusative singular
  • λύοντες — masculine nominative plural
  • λυούσαις — feminine dative plural

The Second Rule: Participles Have Tense-Form and Voice

A participle must also be identified by tense-form and voice.

Tense-Form Typical Recognition Idea
Present Present stem; action viewed as ongoing or in progress
Aorist Aorist stem; action viewed as a whole
Perfect Perfect stem; completed action with resulting state
Future Future stem; action expected or intended
Voice Basic Meaning
Active The noun or subject associated with the participle performs the action
Middle The noun or subject is specially involved in the action
Passive The noun or subject receives the action

Master Participle Recognition Table

Pattern Usually Indicates Example
-ων, -ουσα, -ον Present active participle λύων, λύουσα, λῦον
-όμενος, -ομένη, -όμενον Present middle/passive participle λυόμενος
-σας, -σασα, -σαν First aorist active participle λύσας
-σάμενος, -σαμένη, -σάμενον First aorist middle participle λυσάμενος
-ών, -οῦσα, -όν Second aorist active participle λαβών
-όμενος, -ομένη, -όμενον with second aorist stem Second aorist middle participle γενόμενος
-θείς, -θεῖσα, -θέν Aorist passive participle λυθείς
-κώς, -κυῖα, -κός Perfect active participle λελυκώς
-μένος, -μένη, -μένον Perfect middle/passive participle λελυμένος
-σων, -σουσα, -σον Future active participle λύσων
-σόμενος, -σομένη, -σόμενον Future middle participle λυσόμενος
-θησόμενος, -θησομένη, -θησόμενον Future passive participle λυθησόμενος

How to Parse a Participle Step by Step

  1. Identify the lexical form.
  2. Confirm that the form is a participle.
  3. Identify the stem.
  4. Identify the tense-form.
  5. Identify the voice.
  6. Identify gender.
  7. Identify number.
  8. Identify case.
  9. Find the noun or pronoun the participle relates to, if one is expressed.
  10. Determine the participle’s function in context.

This order is important. Do not start by translating. First identify the form.

Present Active Participle

The present active participle is recognized by the pattern -ων, -ουσα, -ον. It uses the present stem and active participle endings.

Basic lexical model:

λύων, λύουσα, λῦον

Gender Nominative Singular Meaning
Masculine λύων loosing
Feminine λύουσα loosing
Neuter λῦον loosing

Present Active Participle Declension

Case Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Neuter Singular
Nominative λύων λύουσα λῦον
Genitive λύοντος λυούσης λύοντος
Dative λύοντι λυούσῃ λύοντι
Accusative λύοντα λύουσαν λῦον
Case Masculine Plural Feminine Plural Neuter Plural
Nominative λύοντες λύουσαι λύοντα
Genitive λυόντων λυουσῶν λυόντων
Dative λύουσι(ν) λυούσαις λύουσι(ν)
Accusative λύοντας λυούσας λύοντα

Present Middle/Passive Participle

The present middle/passive participle is recognized by the pattern -όμενος, -ομένη, -όμενον. It uses the present stem and middle/passive participle endings.

Basic lexical model:

λυόμενος, λυομένη, λυόμενον

Gender Nominative Singular Possible Meaning
Masculine λυόμενος acting in middle voice / being loosed
Feminine λυομένη acting in middle voice / being loosed
Neuter λυόμενον acting in middle voice / being loosed

Present Middle/Passive Participle Declension

Case Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Neuter Singular
Nominative λυόμενος λυομένη λυόμενον
Genitive λυομένου λυομένης λυομένου
Dative λυομένῳ λυομένῃ λυομένῳ
Accusative λυόμενον λυομένην λυόμενον
Case Masculine Plural Feminine Plural Neuter Plural
Nominative λυόμενοι λυόμεναι λυόμενα
Genitive λυομένων λυομένων λυομένων
Dative λυομένοις λυομέναις λυομένοις
Accusative λυομένους λυομένας λυόμενα

Aorist Active Participle

The first aorist active participle is recognized by the pattern -σας, -σασα, -σαν. It uses the aorist stem and active participle endings.

Basic lexical model:

λύσας, λύσασα, λῦσαν

Gender Nominative Singular Meaning
Masculine λύσας having loosed
Feminine λύσασα having loosed
Neuter λῦσαν having loosed

Aorist Active Participle Declension

Case Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Neuter Singular
Nominative λύσας λύσασα λῦσαν
Genitive λύσαντος λυσάσης λύσαντος
Dative λύσαντι λυσάσῃ λύσαντι
Accusative λύσαντα λύσασαν λῦσαν
Case Masculine Plural Feminine Plural Neuter Plural
Nominative λύσαντες λύσασαι λύσαντα
Genitive λυσάντων λυσασῶν λυσάντων
Dative λύσασι(ν) λυσάσαις λύσασι(ν)
Accusative λύσαντας λυσάσας λύσαντα

Aorist Middle Participle

The first aorist middle participle is recognized by the pattern -σάμενος, -σαμένη, -σάμενον.

Basic lexical model:

λυσάμενος, λυσαμένη, λυσάμενον

Gender Nominative Singular Possible Meaning
Masculine λυσάμενος having acted in middle voice
Feminine λυσαμένη having acted in middle voice
Neuter λυσάμενον having acted in middle voice

Aorist Middle Participle Declension

Case Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Neuter Singular
Nominative λυσάμενος λυσαμένη λυσάμενον
Genitive λυσαμένου λυσαμένης λυσαμένου
Dative λυσαμένῳ λυσαμένῃ λυσαμένῳ
Accusative λυσάμενον λυσαμένην λυσάμενον
Case Masculine Plural Feminine Plural Neuter Plural
Nominative λυσάμενοι λυσάμεναι λυσάμενα
Genitive λυσαμένων λυσαμένων λυσαμένων
Dative λυσαμένοις λυσαμέναις λυσαμένοις
Accusative λυσαμένους λυσαμένας λυσάμενα

Second Aorist Active Participle

The second aorist active participle uses a second aorist stem and the pattern -ών, -οῦσα, -όν. It does not use the first aorist -σας pattern.

Lexical Form Participle Parsing
λαμβάνω λαβών Second aorist active participle, masculine nominative singular
ἔρχομαι ἐλθών Second aorist active participle, masculine nominative singular
λέγω εἰπών Second aorist active participle, masculine nominative singular
ὁράω ἰδών Second aorist active participle, masculine nominative singular

Second Aorist Active Participle Declension Model

Using λαβών as the model:

Case Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Neuter Singular
Nominative λαβών λαβοῦσα λαβόν
Genitive λαβόντος λαβούσης λαβόντος
Dative λαβόντι λαβούσῃ λαβόντι
Accusative λαβόντα λαβοῦσαν λαβόν

Aorist Passive Participle

The aorist passive participle is recognized by the pattern -θείς, -θεῖσα, -θέν. It uses the aorist passive stem.

Basic lexical model:

λυθείς, λυθεῖσα, λυθέν

Gender Nominative Singular Meaning
Masculine λυθείς having been loosed
Feminine λυθεῖσα having been loosed
Neuter λυθέν having been loosed

Aorist Passive Participle Declension

Case Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Neuter Singular
Nominative λυθείς λυθεῖσα λυθέν
Genitive λυθέντος λυθείσης λυθέντος
Dative λυθέντι λυθείσῃ λυθέντι
Accusative λυθέντα λυθεῖσαν λυθέν
Case Masculine Plural Feminine Plural Neuter Plural
Nominative λυθέντες λυθεῖσαι λυθέντα
Genitive λυθέντων λυθεισῶν λυθέντων
Dative λυθεῖσι(ν) λυθείσαις λυθεῖσι(ν)
Accusative λυθέντας λυθείσας λυθέντα

Perfect Active Participle

The perfect active participle is recognized by reduplication and the pattern -κώς, -κυῖα, -κός. Some verbs may have irregular perfect stems, so principal parts remain important.

Basic lexical model:

λελυκώς, λελυκυῖα, λελυκός

Gender Nominative Singular Meaning
Masculine λελυκώς having loosed / having completed loosing
Feminine λελυκυῖα having loosed / having completed loosing
Neuter λελυκός having loosed / having completed loosing

Perfect Active Participle Declension

Case Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Neuter Singular
Nominative λελυκώς λελυκυῖα λελυκός
Genitive λελυκότος λελυκυίας λελυκότος
Dative λελυκότι λελυκυίᾳ λελυκότι
Accusative λελυκότα λελυκυῖαν λελυκός

Perfect Middle/Passive Participle

The perfect middle/passive participle is recognized by reduplication and the pattern -μένος, -μένη, -μένον.

Basic lexical model:

λελυμένος, λελυμένη, λελυμένον

Gender Nominative Singular Possible Meaning
Masculine λελυμένος having been loosed / in a loosed state
Feminine λελυμένη having been loosed / in a loosed state
Neuter λελυμένον having been loosed / in a loosed state

Perfect Middle/Passive Participle Declension

Case Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Neuter Singular
Nominative λελυμένος λελυμένη λελυμένον
Genitive λελυμένου λελυμένης λελυμένου
Dative λελυμένῳ λελυμένῃ λελυμένῳ
Accusative λελυμένον λελυμένην λελυμένον
Case Masculine Plural Feminine Plural Neuter Plural
Nominative λελυμένοι λελυμέναι λελυμένα
Genitive λελυμένων λελυμένων λελυμένων
Dative λελυμένοις λελυμέναις λελυμένοις
Accusative λελυμένους λελυμένας λελυμένα

Future Active Participle

The future active participle is less common than present and aorist participles. It is recognized by the future marker -σ- and the active participle pattern -ων, -ουσα, -ον.

Basic lexical model:

λύσων, λύσουσα, λῦσον

Gender Nominative Singular Meaning
Masculine λύσων being about to loose / intending to loose
Feminine λύσουσα being about to loose / intending to loose
Neuter λῦσον being about to loose / intending to loose

Future Middle Participle

The future middle participle is recognized by the future marker -σ- and the middle participle pattern -σόμενος, -σομένη, -σόμενον.

Basic lexical model:

λυσόμενος, λυσομένη, λυσόμενον

Gender Nominative Singular Possible Meaning
Masculine λυσόμενος being about to act in middle voice
Feminine λυσομένη being about to act in middle voice
Neuter λυσόμενον being about to act in middle voice

Future Passive Participle

The future passive participle is recognized by -θησ- and the middle/passive participle pattern -όμενος, -ομένη, -όμενον.

Basic lexical model:

λυθησόμενος, λυθησομένη, λυθησόμενον

Gender Nominative Singular Meaning
Masculine λυθησόμενος being about to be loosed
Feminine λυθησομένη being about to be loosed
Neuter λυθησόμενον being about to be loosed

Participles from Contract Verbs

Contract verbs often produce forms with contracted vowels. Students must recognize the underlying pattern even when the surface form looks different.

Lexical Form Present Active Participle Aorist Active Participle
ἀγαπάω ἀγαπῶν ἀγαπήσας
ποιέω ποιῶν ποιήσας
πληρόω πληρῶν πληρώσας
ζητέω ζητῶν ζητήσας

Participles from Common Irregular Verbs

Lexical Form Common Participle Parsing
εἰμί ὤν, οὖσα, ὄν Present active participle
ἔρχομαι ἐλθών Second aorist active participle
λέγω εἰπών Second aorist active participle
λαμβάνω λαβών Second aorist active participle
ὁράω ἰδών Second aorist active participle
γίνομαι γενόμενος Second aorist middle participle
ἀποκρίνομαι ἀποκριθείς Aorist passive-form participle with deponent meaning in many contexts
πορεύομαι πορευθείς Aorist passive-form participle with deponent meaning in many contexts

New Testament Examples of Participle Recognition

Matthew 27:35

Σταυρώσαντες δὲ αὐτόν, διεμερίσαντο τὰ ἱμάτια αὐτοῦ.

“And having crucified Him, they divided His garments.”

The form Σταυρώσαντες comes from σταυρόω. The ending -σαντες identifies an aorist active participle, masculine nominative plural.

John 1:12

ὅσοι δὲ ἔλαβον αὐτόν, ἔδωκεν αὐτοῖς ἐξουσίαν τέκνα Θεοῦ γενέσθαι, τοῖς πιστεύουσιν εἰς τὸ ὄνομα αὐτοῦ.

“But as many as received Him, He gave to them authority to become children of God, to those believing in His name.”

The form πιστεύουσιν is present active participle, dative masculine plural, from πιστεύω. The article τοῖς makes the participle substantival: “to those who believe.”

Matthew 2:12

χρηματισθέντες κατ᾽ ὄναρ μὴ ἀνακάμψαι πρὸς Ἡρῴδην.

“Having been warned in a dream not to return to Herod.”

The form χρηματισθέντες contains -θεντες, identifying an aorist passive participle, masculine nominative plural.

Participle Function: The Basic Categories

After identifying the form, students must determine how the participle functions in context.

Function Description Simple Translation Idea
Adjectival Modifies a noun the man who is speaking
Substantival Functions as a noun the one who speaks
Adverbial Modifies the main verb while speaking, after speaking, because he spoke
Complementary Completes the idea of another verb continued speaking
Periphrastic Combines with εἰμί to form a verbal construction was speaking
Genitive Absolute Genitive participial construction with its own subject while / when / because something happened

How Article Helps Identify Participles

The article often helps determine whether a participle is adjectival or substantival.

Pattern Likely Function Example
Article + participle, no noun Substantival participle ὁ πιστεύων — the one who believes
Article + noun + article + participle Attributive participle ὁ ἄνθρωπος ὁ πιστεύων — the believing man
Anarthrous participle with main verb Often adverbial ἐλθὼν εἶπεν — having come, he said

Common Participial Translation Possibilities

A Greek participle may be translated in several ways depending on context.

Greek Participle Idea Possible English Translation
Temporal when, while, after
Causal because, since
Means by doing
Manner while doing, in doing
Concessive although
Conditional if
Purpose in order to, intending to
Attendant circumstance and he did

Do not choose one translation label mechanically. The context determines the relationship.

Participles Do Not Have Augment

Participles normally do not take augment, even when they are aorist. This is one of the most important recognition rules.

Finite Aorist Indicative Aorist Participle
ἔλυσα λύσας
ἔλαβον λαβών
ἐλύθην λυθείς

If a student expects an augment in an aorist participle, he will miss many forms.

Common Student Mistakes

  • Parsing participles for person instead of gender, number, and case.
  • Forgetting that participles do not normally have augment.
  • Confusing present active participles with finite verbs.
  • Confusing -οντες with finite third plural endings.
  • Failing to distinguish first aorist and second aorist participles.
  • Missing aorist passive participles such as -θείς, -θεῖσα, -θέν.
  • Assuming every -μένος form is present middle/passive when it may be perfect middle/passive.
  • Ignoring the article before a participle.
  • Translating every participle with “while” or “having” mechanically.
  • Failing to connect the participle to the noun it modifies.

Participle Parsing Flowchart

Step Question What to Look For
1 Is this form finite or participial? Look for participle endings, not personal endings.
2 What is the lexical form? Identify the dictionary verb.
3 Which tense-form appears? Present, aorist, perfect, or future stem.
4 Which voice appears? Active, middle, passive, or middle/passive.
5 What is the gender? Masculine, feminine, or neuter ending.
6 What is the number? Singular or plural ending.
7 What is the case? Nominative, genitive, dative, or accusative ending.
8 Is there an article? Article may mark adjectival or substantival use.
9 What noun does it modify? Check agreement in gender, number, and case.
10 How does it relate to the main verb? Temporal, causal, means, manner, condition, concession, purpose, or attendant circumstance.

Quick Recognition Chart by Ending

Ending or Pattern First Recognition
-ων Often masculine nominative singular active participle
-ουσα Feminine nominative singular present active participle
-ον Neuter nominative/accusative singular active participle; context needed
-οντες Masculine nominative plural active participle
-ουσαι Feminine nominative plural present active participle
-όμενος Masculine nominative singular present middle/passive participle
-όμενον Neuter nominative/accusative singular or masculine accusative singular present middle/passive participle
-σας Masculine nominative singular first aorist active participle
-σαντες Masculine nominative plural first aorist active participle
-σάμενος Masculine nominative singular aorist middle participle
-θείς Masculine nominative singular aorist passive participle
-θέντες Masculine nominative plural aorist passive participle
-κώς Masculine nominative singular perfect active participle
-κυῖα Feminine nominative singular perfect active participle
-μένος Masculine nominative singular perfect middle/passive participle, or other middle/passive participial form depending on stem
-σων Masculine nominative singular future active participle
-σόμενος Masculine nominative singular future middle participle
-θησόμενος Masculine nominative singular future passive participle

Memorization Strategy for Greek Participles

Students should memorize participles by families rather than as isolated forms.

Family Forms to Memorize First
Present active -ων, -ουσα, -ον
Present middle/passive -όμενος, -ομένη, -όμενον
Aorist active -σας, -σασα, -σαν; second aorist -ών, -οῦσα, -όν
Aorist middle -σάμενος, -σαμένη, -σάμενον
Aorist passive -θείς, -θεῖσα, -θέν
Perfect active -κώς, -κυῖα, -κός
Perfect middle/passive -μένος, -μένη, -μένον
Future active -σων, -σουσα, -σον
Future middle -σόμενος, -σομένη, -σόμενον
Future passive -θησόμενος, -θησομένη, -θησόμενον

Mastering Greek Participle Recognition for Faster New Testament Reading

Greek participles are verbal adjectives. They must be parsed for tense-form, voice, gender, number, and case. They do not have person. The most important recognition patterns are -ων, -ουσα, -ον for present active; -όμενος, -ομένη, -όμενον for present middle/passive; -σας, -σασα, -σαν for first aorist active; -σάμενος, -σαμένη, -σάμενον for aorist middle; -θείς, -θεῖσα, -θέν for aorist passive; -κώς, -κυῖα, -κός for perfect active; and -μένος, -μένη, -μένον for perfect middle/passive.

Students who master participle endings will read the Greek New Testament more fluently and interpret sentences more accurately. Participles can modify nouns, function as nouns, describe circumstances, form periphrastic constructions, or create genitive absolute clauses. Because participles carry both verbal and adjectival information, they are one of the richest and most important forms in New Testament Greek. Recognizing them quickly is essential for responsible translation and interpretation.

 

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