Quote:
Originally Posted by kikar
I am one of those who can read Koine Greek. I love the fact that this treasure has been made available for all to see and study I would love to have this on my Sony and Kindle to have with me to peruse offline at my leisure. As well as the Codex Leningradensis and Codex Vaticanus. It would be nice to have the original koine greek as well as translations made available so everyone could not just study but read and enjoy a bit of history. Heck I would love to have as many historical documents digitized as possible so the many have access to what once was, and to some extent still is, the domain of a few.
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I suppose you could copy the pages from the web site and make your own book. Take a look. All uppercase, no spaces between words, old words that no one knows for sure what they mean. It is not likely to have mass appeal. You can get original language versions using Bible programs that provide much of what you want but of course not everything exactly. Having the electronic images is the best you can do. The alphabet isn't even drawn exactly the same way so fonts are useless.
Dale