
Multiple patterns and the number that must appear within a given amount of context may be specified. Searching in the TLG, PHI, DDP and inscriptions corpora using a subset of Perl regular expressions. Once you have defined a custom sub-corpus in this way, you can perform different searches with it again and again. Diogenes is a free program for searching and browsing databases of ancient texts, primarily in Latin and Greek, that are published by the Thesaurus Linguae. For corpora other than the TLG this may be done by author and work number and name for the TLG, which includes much more information, searches may also be restricted by a range of dates, genre, location, and author's gender and epithet. Restricting searches to specific authors and works. which for Greek are derived from the Perseus corpus and the TLG wordlist. Then select a headword and you are shown all of its inflected forms. If you just want to install and run the program, go to the Diogenes webpage. Enter a Latin or Greek word and be shown the matching dictionary headwords (click on them for definitions). In a dictionary definition, click any citation of a passage in Latin or Greek to jump right to its context.Īgain, thanks to Perseus, Diogenes can do morphologically aware searching. Click on any Greek, Latin or English word in that definition to see its definition. The application automatically connects to online resources and databases, supported by the Packard Humanities Institute and the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae. Click on a word and see its morphology and definition. Diogenes is program designed to perform morphological analysis and to be a dictionary of both Latin and ancient Greek. Adobe Premiere and other Cutting Software. Thanks to Perseus, Diogenes comes equipped with morphological analysis of Greek and Latin and Greek and Latin dictionaries. Diogenes, TLG, ThLL, Brepolis, SNS Latin and Greek) Adobe Photoshop.

Diogenes is a tool for searching and browsing the databases of ancient texts, primarily in Latin and Greek, that are published by the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae and the Packard Humanities Institute.
