Page:A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament.djvu/85

ἀποδιορίξζω abgeben, (cf. Win. De verb. comp. etc. Pt. iv. p. 12 sq. who regards 🇬🇷 as denoting to give from some reserved store, or to give over something which might have been retained, or to lay off some burden of debt or duty; cf. Cope on Aristot. rhet. 1, 1, 7]); &emsp; 1. to deliver, relinquish what is one’s own: 🇬🇷, Mt. xxvii. 58; hence: in mid. to give away for one’s own profit what is one’s own, i. e. to sell [W. 253 (238)]: 🇬🇷, Acts v. 8; Heb. xii. 16; 🇬🇷, Acts vii. 9, (often in this sense in Grk. writ., esp. the Attic, fr. Hdt. 1, 70 down; in Sept. for, Gen. xxv. 33 etc.; Bar. vi. [i. e. Ep. Jer.] 27 (28)). &emsp; 2. to pay off, discharge, what is due, (because a debt, like a burden, is thrown off; 🇬🇷, by being paid): a debt (Germ. abtragen), Mt. v. 26; xviii. 25-30, 34; Lk. vii. 42; x. 35; xii. 59; wages, Mt. xx. 8; tribute and other dues to the government, Mt. xxii. 21; Mk. xii. 17; Lk. xx. 25; Ro. xiii. 7; produce due, Mt. xxi. 41; Heb. xii. 11; Rev. xxii. 2; 🇬🇷 things promised under oath, Mt. v. 33, cf. Num. xxx. 3, (🇬🇷 a vow, Deut. xxiii. 21, etc.); conjugal duty, 1 Co. vii. 3; 🇬🇷 grateful requitals, 1 Tim. v. 4; 🇬🇷 to render account: Mt. xii. 36; Lk. xvi. 2; Acts xix. 40; Ro. xiv. 12 L txt. Tr txt.; Heb. xiii. 17; 1 Pet. iv. 5; 🇬🇷 to give testimony (as something officially due), Acts iv. 33. Hence &emsp; 3. to give back, restore: Lk. iv. 20; [vii. 15 Lchm. mrg.]; ix. 42; xix. 8. &emsp; 4. to requite, recompense, in a good or a bad sense: Mt. vi. 4, 6, 18; xvi. 27; Ro. ii. 6; 2 Tim. iv. [8], 14; Rev. xviii. 6; xxii. 12; 🇬🇷, Ro. xii. 17; 1 Th. v. 15; 1 Pet. iii. 9. [.: 🇬🇷.]*

🇬🇷; (🇬🇷, and this fr. 🇬🇷 a limit); by drawing boundaries to disjoin, part, separate from another: Jude 19 (🇬🇷 those who by their wickedness separate themselves from the living fellowship of Christians; if 🇬🇷 be dropped, with Rec$st$. G L T Tr WH, the rendering is making divisions or separations). Aristot. pol. 4, 4, 13 [p. 1290$b$, 25].)*

🇬🇷: (see 🇬🇷); 1 aor. 🇬🇷; Pass., 1 aor. 🇬🇷; pf. ptcp. 🇬🇷; to disapprove, reject, repudiate: Mt. xxi. 42; Mk. viii. 31; xii. 10; Lk. ix. 22; xvii. 25; xx. 17; 1 Pet. ii. 4, 7; Heb. xii. 17. (Equiv. to in Ps. cxvii. (cxviii.) 22; Jer. viii. 9, etc.; in Grk. writ. fr. Hdt. 6, 130 down.)*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷, q. ν.), reception, admission, acceptance, approbation, [A. V. acceptation]: 1 Tim. i. 15; iv. 9. (Polyb. 2, 56, 1; 6, 2, 13, etc.; 🇬🇷 id. 1, 5, 5; Diod. 4, 84; Joseph. antt. 6, 14, 4; al. [cf. Field, Otium Norv. pars iii. p. 124].)*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, [🇬🇷], a putting off or away: 2 Pet. i. 14; 1 Pet. iii. 21. [In various senses fr. Hippoc. and Plato down.]*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷), a place in which any thing is laid by or up; a storehouse, granary, [A. V. garner, barn]: Mt. iii. 12; vi. 26; xiii. 30; Lk. iii. 17; xii. 18, 24. (Jer. xxvii. (l.) 26; Thuc. 6, 97.)*

🇬🇷; to put away, lay by in store, to treasure away, [ thesaurum colligere, Win. De verb. comp. etc. Pt. iv. p. 10]; to store up abundance for future use: 1 Tim. vi. 19. [Sir. iii. 4; Diod., Joseph., Epict., al.]*

🇬🇷; to press on all sides, squeeze, press hard: Lk. viii. 45. (Num. xxii. 25; used also of pressing out grapes and olives, Diod. 3, 62; Joseph. antt. 2, 5, 2; [al.].)*

🇬🇷, impf. 🇬🇷 (Lk. viii. 42); 2 aor. 🇬🇷; fut. 🇬🇷, Ro. v. 7; Jn. viii. 21, 24, (see 🇬🇷); found in Grk. writ. fr. Hom. down; to die (🇬🇷, so as to be no more; [cf. Lat.  morior; Eng. die  or  , pass  ]; Germ.  sterben,  sterben); &emsp; I. used properly &emsp; 1. of the  death of men: Mt. ix. 24; xxii. 24; Lk. xvi. 22; Jn. iv. 47; Ro. vii. 2, and very often; 🇬🇷 subject to death, mortal, Heb. vii. 8 [B. 206 (178)]. &emsp; 2. of the violent death—both of animals, Mt. viii. 32, and of men, Mt. xxvi. 35; Acts xxi. 13 etc.; 1 Pet. iii. 18 L T Tr WH txt; 🇬🇷, Heb. xi. 37; of the punishment of death, Heb. x. 28; often of the violent death which Christ suffered, as Jn. xii. 33; Ro. v. 6, etc. &emsp; 3. Phrases: 🇬🇷 to perish by means of something, [cf. Eng. to die of], Rev. viii. 11; 🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, fixed in sin, hence to die unreformed, Jn. viii. 21, 24; 🇬🇷 by connection with Adam, 1 Co. xv. 22; 🇬🇷 in fellowship with, and trusting in, the Lord, Rev. xiv. 13; 🇬🇷 to die a certain death, Ro. vi. 10, (🇬🇷, Charit. p. 12 ed. D’Orville [l. i. c. 8 p. 17, 6 ed. Beck; cf. W. 227 (213); B. 149 (130)]); 🇬🇷, used of Christ, ‘that he might not have to busy himself more with the sin of men,’ Ro. vi. 10; 🇬🇷 to become one’s own master, independent, by dying, Ro. xiv. 7 [cf. Meyer]; 🇬🇷 to become subject to the Lord’s will by dying, Ro. xiv. 8 [cf. Mey.]; {grc|διά τινα}} i. e. to save one, 1 Co. viii. 11; on the phrases 🇬🇷 and 🇬🇷, see 🇬🇷 I. c. δ. and 🇬🇷 I. 2 and 3. Oratorically, although the proper signification of the verb is retained, 🇬🇷 I meet death daily, live daily in danger of death, 1 Co. xv. 31, cf. 2 Co. vi. 9. &emsp; 4. of trees which dry up, Jude 12; of seeds, which while being resolved into their elements in the ground seem to perish by rotting, Jn. xii. 24; 1 Co. xv. 36. &emsp; II. tropically, in various senses; &emsp; 1. of eternal death, as it is called, i. e. to be subject to eternal misery, and that, too, already beginning on earth: Ro. viii. 13; Jn. vi. 50; xi. 26. &emsp; 2. of moral death, in various senses; &ensp; a. to be deprived of real life, i. e. esp. of the power of doing right, of confidence in God and the hope of future blessedness, Ro. vii. 10; of the spiritual torpor of those who have fallen from the fellowship of Christ, the fountain of true life, Rev. iii. 2. &ensp; b. with dat. of the thing [cf. W. 210 (197); 428 (398); B. 178 (155)], to become wholly alienated from a thing, and freed from all connection with it: 🇬🇷, Gal. ii. 19, which must also be supplied with 🇬🇷 (for so we must read for Rec$elz$. 🇬🇷) in Ro. vii. 6 [cf. W. 159 (150)]; 🇬🇷, Ro. vi. 2 (in another sense in vs. 10; see I. above); 🇬🇷 so that your relation to etc. has passed away, Col. ii. 20, (🇬🇷, Porphyr. de abst. animal. 1, 41 [cf. B. 322 (277); W. 370 (347)]); true Christians are said simply 🇬🇷, as having put off all sensibility to worldly things that draw them