Page:A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament.djvu/57

Ἀμπλίατος cf. W. 102 (97)), a certain Christian at Rome: Ro. xvi. 8. [See Bp. Lghtft. on Phil. p. 174; cf. The Athenæum for March 4, 1882, p. 289 sq.]*

🇬🇷 (Tdf.) or more correctly 🇬🇷 (L mrg. Tr WH) i. q. 🇬🇷, q. v.

🇬🇷: 1 aor. mid. 🇬🇷; [allied w. Lat. munio, moenia, etc., Vaniček p. 731; Curtius § 451]; in Grk. writ. [fr Hom. down] to ward off, keep off any thing from any one, 🇬🇷, acc. of the thing and dat. of pers. hence, with a simple dat. of the pers. to aid, assist any one (Thuc. 1, 50; 3, 67, al.). Mid. 🇬🇷, with acc. of pers., to keep off, ward off, any one from one’s self; to defend one’s self against any one (so also 2 Macc. x. 17; Sap. xi. 3; Sept. Josh. x. 13); to take vengeance on any one (Xen. an. 2, 3, 23; Joseph. antt. 9, 1, 2): Acts vii. 24, where in thought supply 🇬🇷 [cf. B. 194 (168) note; W. 258 (242)].*

🇬🇷; [fr. 🇬🇷, lit. to put around]; to put on, clothe: in Lk. xii. 28 L WH 🇬🇷 for Rec. 🇬🇷. (A later Grk. word; Sept. [2 K. xvii. 9 Alex.]; Job xxix. 14; [xxxi. 19]; xl. 5; Ps. lxxii. 6 Symm.; several times in Themist.; cf. Bttm. Ausf. Spr. ii. p. 112; [Veitch s. v.; B. 49 (42 sq.); Steph. s. v. col. 201 c. quotes from Cram. Anecdot. Ox. vol. ii. p. 338, 31 🇬🇷].) Cf. 🇬🇷.*

🇬🇷; to throw around, i. q. 🇬🇷, of a garment (Hom. Od. 14, 342); to cast to and fro now to one side now to the other: a net, Mk. i. 16 G L T Tr WH [acc. to T Tr WH used absol.; cf. 🇬🇷, Is. xix. 8]. (Hab. i. 17.)*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷), in Grk. writ. anything thrown around one to impede his motion, as chains, a garment; spec. a net for fishing, [casting-net]: Mk. i. 16 R G L; Mt. iv. 18. (Sept.; Hes. scut. 215; Hdt. 1, 141; Athen. 10, 72, p. 450.) [. see 🇬🇷, and cf. Trench § lxiv.; B. D. s. v. net.]*

🇬🇷, i. q. 🇬🇷; in Lk. xii. 28 🇬🇷 T Tr. Cf. ἀμφιάζω.

🇬🇷; pf. pass. 🇬🇷; (🇬🇷); [fr. Hom. down]; to put on, to clothe: Lk. xii. 28 (R G; cf. 🇬🇷); Mt. vi. 30; 🇬🇷 [B. 191 (166) ], Lk. vii. 25; Mt. xi. 8.*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, Amphipolis, the metropolis of Macedonia Prima (cf. B. D. s. v. Macedonia]; so called, because the Strymon flowed around it [Thuc. 4, 102]; formerly called 🇬🇷 (Thuc. 1, 100): Acts xvii. 1 [see B. D.].*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷), prop. a road round anything, a street, [Hesych. 🇬🇷 (al. 🇬🇷, al. 🇬🇷); Lex. in Bekk. Anecdota i. p. 205, 14 🇬🇷. For exx. see Soph. Lex.; Wetst. on Mk. l. c.; cod. D in Acts xix. 28 (where see Tdf.’s note)]: Mk. xi. 4. (Jer. xvii. 27; xxx. 16 (xlix. 27), and in Grk. writ.)*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, [fr. Hom. down], both of two, both the one and the other: Mt. ix. 17, etc.; 🇬🇷, Acts xxiii. 8; Eph. ii. 14.

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷), that cannot be censured, blameless: Phil. ii. 15 R G (cf. 🇬🇷, Deut. xxxii. 5); 2 Pet. iii. 14. (Hom. Il. 12, 109; [Hesiod, Pind., al.;] Plut. frat. amor. 18; often in Anthol.)*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, amomum, a fragrant plant of India, having the foliage of the white vine [al. ampeloleuce] and seed, in clusters like grapes, from which ointment was made (Plin. h. n. 12, 13 [28]): Rev. xviii. 13 G L T Tr WH. [See B. D. Am. ed. s. v.]*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷), without blemish, free from faultiness, as a victim without spot or blemish: 1 Pet. i. 19 (Lev. xxii. 21); Heb. ix. 14; in both places allusion is made to the sinless life of Christ. Ethically, without blemish, faultless, unblamable: Eph. i. 4; v. 27; Col. i. 22; Phil. ii. 15 L T Tr WH; Jude 24; Rev. xiv. 5. (Often in Sept.; [Hesiod, Simon. Iambl.], Hdt. 2, 177, Aeschyl. Pers. 185; Theocr. 18, 25.) [. see Trench § ciii.; Tittmann i. 29 sq.]*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, indecl., Amon, ( artificer [but cf. B. D.]), king of Judah, son of Manasseh, and father of Josiah: Mt. i. 10, (L T Tr WΗ 🇬🇷. Cf. Β. D.].*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, Amos, ( strong), indecl. prop. name of one of Christ's ancestors: [Mt. i. 10 L T Tr WH]; Lk. iii. 25.*

🇬🇷, a particle indicating that something can or could occur on certain conditions, or by the combination of certain fortuitous causes. In Lat. it has no equivalent; nor do the Eng. haply, perchance, Germ. wohl (wol), etwa, exactly and everywhere correspond to it. The use of this particle in the N. T., illustrated by copious exx. fr. Grk. writ. is shown by W. § 42; [cf. B. 216 (186) sqq. Its use in classic Grk. is fully exhibited (by Prof. Goodwin) in L. and S. s. v.].

It is joined &emsp; I. in the apodoses of hypothetical sentences &emsp; 1. with the Impf., where the Lat. uses the impf. subjunctive, e. g. Lk. vii. 39 (🇬🇷, sciret, he would know); Lk. xvii. 6 (🇬🇷 ye would say); Mt. xxiii. 30 (non essemus, we should not have been); Jn. v. 46; viii. 42; ix. 41; xv. 19; xviii. 36; 1 Co. xi. 31; Gal. i. 10; iii. 21 [but WH mrg. br.]; Heb. iv. 8; viii. 4, 7. &emsp; 2. with the indic. Aor. (where the Lat. uses the plpf. subj. like the fut. pf. subj., I would have done it), to express what would have been, if this or that either were (🇬🇷 with the impf. in the protasis preceding), or had been (🇬🇷 with the aor. or plpf. preceding): Mt. xi. 21 and Lk. x. 13 (🇬🇷 they would have repented); Mt. xi. 23; xii. 7 (ye would not have condemned); Mt. xxiv. 43 (he would have watched), 22 and Mk. xiii. 20 (no one would have been saved, i. e. all even now would have to be regarded as those who had perished; cf. W. 304 (286)); Jn. iv. 10 (thou wouldst have asked); xiv. 2 (🇬🇷 I would have said so); 28 (ye would have rejoiced); Ro. ix. 29 (we should have become); 1 Co. ii. 8; Gal. iv. 15 (R G); Acts xviii. 14. Sometimes the condition is not expressly stated, but is easily gathered from what is said: Lk. xix. 23 and Mt. xxv. 27 (I should have received it back with interest, sc. if thou hadst given it to the bankers). &emsp; 3. with the Plupf.: Jn. xi. 21 [R Tr mrg.] (🇬🇷 [L T Tr txt. WH 🇬🇷]