Page:A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament.djvu/90

ἀπομάσσω 🇬🇷; impf. mid. 🇬🇷 (Acts xxviii. 25); used in the N. T. only in the historical books and in Heb. xiii. 23; to loose from, sever by loosening, undo, [see 🇬🇷, V.]; &emsp; 1. to set free: 🇬🇷 (so in Grk. writ. even fr. Hom. down), to liberate one from a thing (as from a bond), Lk. xiii. 12 (🇬🇷 [thou hast been loosed i. e.] be thou free from [cf. W. § 40, 4] 🇬🇷 [L T 🇬🇷]). &emsp; 2. to let go, dismiss, (to detain no longer); 🇬🇷, &ensp; a. a suppliant to whom liberty to depart is given by a decisive answer: Mt. xv. 23; Lk. ii. 29 (‘me whom thou hadst determined to keep on earth until I had seen the salvation prepared for Israel, cf. vs. 26, thou art now dismissing with my wish accomplished, and this dismission is at the same time dismission also from life’—in reference to which 🇬🇷 is used in Num. xx. 29; Tob. iii. 6; [cf. Gen. xv. 2; 2 Macc. vii. 9; Plut. consol. ad Apoll. § 13 cf. 11 fin.]); [Acts xxiii. 22]. &ensp; b. to bid depart, send away: Mt. xiv. 15, 22 sq.; xv. 32, 39; Mk. vi. 36, 45; viii. 3, 9; Lk. viii. 38; ix. 12; xiv. 4; Acts xiii. 3; xix. 41 (🇬🇷); pass. Acts xν. 30, 83. &emsp; 3. to let go free, to release; &ensp; a. a captive, i. e. to loose his bonds and bid him depart, to give him liberty to depart: Lk. xxii. 68 [R G L Tr in br.]; xxiii. 22; Jn. xix. 10; Acts xvi. 35 sq.; xxvi. 32 (🇬🇷 [might have been set at liberty, cf. B. 217 (187), § 139, 27 c.; W. 305 (286) i. e.] might be free; pf. as in Lk. xiii. 12 [see 1 above, and W. 334 (313)]); Acts xxviii. 18; Heb. xiii. 23; 🇬🇷 to release one to one, grant him his liberty: Mt. xxvii. 15, 17, 21, 26; Mk. xv. 6, 9, 11, 15; Lk. xxiii. [16], 17 [R L in br.], 18, 20, 25; [Jn. xviii. 39]. &ensp; b. to acquit one accused of a crime and set him at liberty: Jn. xix. 12; Acts iii. 13. &ensp; c. indulgently to grant a prisoner leave to depart: Acts iv. 21, 23; v. 40; xvii. 9. &ensp; d. to release a debtor, i. e. not to press one’s claim against him, to remit his debt: Mt. xviii. 27; metaph. to pardon another his offences against me: Lk. vi. 37, (🇬🇷, 2 Macc. xii. 45). &emsp; 4. used of divorce, as 🇬🇷 to dismiss from the house, to repudiate: Mt. i. 19; v. 31 sq.; xix. 3, 7-9; Mk. x. 2, 4, 11; Lk. xvi. 18; [1 Esdr. ix. 36]; and improperly a wife deserting her husband is said 🇬🇷 in Mk. x. 12 [cf. Diod. 12, 18] (unless, as is more probable, Mark, contrary to historic accuracy [yet cf. Joseph. antt. 15, 7, 10], makes Jesus speak in accordance with Greek and Roman usage, acc. to which wives also repudiated their husbands [reff. in Mey. ad l.]); (cf., Jer. iii. 8; Deut. xxi. 14; xxii. 19, 29). &emsp; 5. Mid. 🇬🇷, prop. to send one’s self away; to depart [W. 253 (238)]: Acts xxviii. 25 (returned home; Ex. xxxiii. 11).*

🇬🇷: (🇬🇷 to touch with the hands, handle, work with the hands, knead), to wipe off; Mid. 🇬🇷 to wipe one’s self off, to wipe off for one’s self: 🇬🇷, Lk. x. 11. (In Grk. writ. fr. Arstph. down.)*

🇬🇷; (🇬🇷 to dispense a portion, to distribute), to assign, portion out, (🇬🇷 as in 🇬🇷 [q. ν., cf. 🇬🇷, V.]): 🇬🇷 viz. 🇬🇷, showing honor, 1 Pet. iii. 7, (so Hdian. 1, 8, 1; 🇬🇷, Joseph. antt. 1, 7, 1; 🇬🇷, Ignat. ad Magnes. 3; first found in [Simon. 97 in Anthol. Pal. 7, 253, 2 (vol. i. p. 64 ed. Jacobs)]; Pind. Isthm. 2, 68; often in Plat., Aristot., Plut., al.).*

🇬🇷: to wash off; 1 aor. mid. 🇬🇷; in mid. to wash one’s self off; to wash off for one’s self: 🇬🇷, Mt. xxvii. 24, cf. Deut. xxi. 6 sq. (The earlier Greeks say 🇬🇷—but with fut. 🇬🇷, 1 aor. 🇬🇷; the later, as Theophr. char. 25 [30 (17)]; Plut. Phoc. 18; Athen. iv. c. 31 p. 149 c., 🇬🇷, although this is found [but in the mid.] even in Hom. Od. 18, 179.)*

🇬🇷: 2 aor. 🇬🇷; [(cf. 🇬🇷); fr. Hom. down]; to fall off, slip down from: Acts ix. 18 [W. § 52, 4, 1 a.].*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷; 1 aor. pass. 🇬🇷; to cause to go astray, trop. to lead away from the truth to error: 🇬🇷, Mk. xiii. 22; pass. to go astray, stray away from: 🇬🇷, 1 Tim. vi. 10. ([Hippocr.]; Plat. Ax. p. 369 d.; Polyb. 3, 57, 4; Dion. Hal., Plut., al.)*

🇬🇷; 1 aor. 🇬🇷; [fr. Hom. down]; to sail away, depart by ship, set sail: Acts xiii. 4; xiv. 26; xx. 15; xxvii. 1.*

🇬🇷: [1 aor. 🇬🇷 (?)]; to wash off: Lk. v. 2 (where L Tr WH txt. 🇬🇷, T WH mrg. 🇬🇷, for R G 🇬🇷 [possibly an impf. form, cf. B. 40 (35); Soph. Glossary, etc. p. 90]). (Hom. Od. 6, 95; Plat., Plut., and subseq. writ.; Sept. 2 S. xix. 24, [cf. Jer. ii. 22, iv. 14; Ezek. xvi. 9 var.].)*

🇬🇷: 1 aor. 🇬🇷; 2 aor. pass. 🇬🇷; (🇬🇷 as in 🇬🇷 q. v. [cf. to choke off]); to choke: Mt. xiii. 7 (T WH mrg. 🇬🇷); Lk. viii. 7 (of seed overlaid by thorns and killed by them); to suffocate with water, to drown, Lk. viii. 33 (as in Dem. 32, 6 [i. e. p. 883, 28 etc.; schol. ad Eur. Or. 812]).*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷: impf. 3 pers. sing. 🇬🇷 (Mk. vi. 20 T WH Tr mrg.); [pres. mid. 🇬🇷; to be 🇬🇷 (fr. 🇬🇷 priv. and 🇬🇷 a transit, ford, way, revenue, resource), i. e. to be without resources, to be in straits, to be left wanting, to be embarrassed, to be in doubt, not to know which way to turn; [impf. in Mk. vi. 20 (see above) 🇬🇷 he was in perplexity about many things or much perplexed (cf. Thuc. 5, 40, 3; Xen. Hell. 6, 1, 4; Hdt. 3, 4; 4, 179; Aristot. meteorolog. 1, 1); elsewhere] Mid. to be at a loss with one’s self, be in doubt; not to know how to decide or what to do, to be perplexed: absol. 2 Co. iv. 8; 🇬🇷, Lk. xxiv. 4 L T Tr WH; 🇬🇷, Jn. xiii. 22; 🇬🇷 I am perplexed about you, I know not how to deal with you, in what style to address you, Gal. iv. 20; 🇬🇷 [T Tr WH om. 🇬🇷] 🇬🇷 [🇬🇷 L T Tr WH] 🇬🇷 I being perplexed how to decide in reference to the inquiry concerning him [or these things], Acts xxv. 20. (Often in prof. auth. fr. Hdt. down; often also in Sept.) [.: 🇬🇷, 🇬🇷.]*

🇬🇷, 🇬🇷, (🇬🇷, q. ν.), the state of one who is 🇬🇷, perplexity: Lk. xxi. 25. (Often in Grk. writ. fr. [Pind. and] Hdt. down; Sept.)*

🇬🇷: 1 aor. 🇬🇷 [T WH write with one 🇬🇷;