And it’s just 3 bucks, which is less than I spend on things far more trivial. Would I like more? Certainly! Was I annoyed to pay for it, especially when it was free on my phone? Oh yea! But I still did, bc, for what I do, it works great (and the free stuff doesn’t). This is just the text you’re reading and smaller words and phrases right underneath for a quick help on the words you don’t know, with a lot less scrolling and distractions than on Bible hub interlinear (and Bible hub doesn’t do interlinear mode for LXX anyway□). I’d even say “great,” because sometimes less is more. Septuagint LXX Greek Old Testament keyed to Strong's numbers with complete parsing information, and Wescott and Hort 1881 Greek New Testament with NA26/27 variants keyed to Strong's numbers with complete parsing information. Accordingly, you probably know most of the common words and their common parsings, and you just need a little help with the less common words to actually be able to “read” the Bible in Greek! If this is what you’re doing, this app is fine. But let’s stop and think: if you’re reading the LXX, you’re probably NOT a beginning Greek student. The negative reviews are not all wrong: it’s not a “true” interlinear, and the app is really basic, especially for a paid app! A beginner would be far better off just going to Bible hub and clicking interlinear you’d get waaaay more info about each word, and it would be free. Excellent reading Bible if you know some Greek! Pennsylvania Center for Computer Analysis of Texts (CCAT) and their Septuagint Greek Old Testament data files.
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