θεῖον πάνυ χρῆμα τοῦ καθαρτικοῦ,  a splendid cleanser!

νῦν δὴ λευκαί μοι αἱ χεῖρες ὥσπερ ἡ χιών. Ἔρρωσο.
now my hands are white as snow. Farewell.

English Affinities

Panorama. Lamp. Heliotrope. Calisthenics. Ephemeral. Urania. Acoustics. Thaumaturgy. Rose. Lily. Chlorine. Sophist. Cacophony. Misanthrope. Democrat. Animation. Philanthropy. Fire. Optics. Ophthalmia. Cathedral. Clinical. Philadelphia. Adelphi Court. Soap. Chiromancy. Cathartic.

LESSON II

Cases, Genitive and Dative

The genitive case signifies the source from which a thing comes and to which it belongs, as the folly of fools, the fool’s folly, the folly that comes from the fool. The dative case means either the secondary or more distant object of an action, as I gave the book to the boy; or it signifies rest or residence in a thing, for which in English there is no special form; also in Greek it signifies the instrument with which, or by which, a thing is done, as to cut with a knife. In Greek masculines in ος have the genitive in ου and the dative in ῳ; feminines in ρᾱ or ρᾰ and ίᾱ have the genitive in ας and the dative in ᾳ; other feminines in α—as τράπεζᾰ, a table—and feminines in η have ης in the genitive and ῃ in the dative.

ὁρῶ νεφέλην ἐν τῷ οὐρανῷ,  I see a cloud in the sky.

θαυμάζω τὴν σοφίαν τὴν ἐν τῷ σῷ ἀδελφῷ,
I admire the wisdom that is in your brother.

δὸς τῷ ἀδελφῷ τὸν κάλαμον τόνδε,  give your brother this pen.