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Bible Lexicons
Old & New Testament Greek Lexical Dictionary Greek Lexicon
Strong's #2856 - κολοβόω
- Thayer
- Strong
- Mounce
- to mutilate
- in NT: to shorten, abridge, curtail
- Book
- Word
- Parsing
did not use
this Strong's Number
κολοβ-όω,
I dock, curtail, mutilate, Arist. Fr. 101, Plb. 1.80.13; τὰς χεῖρας καὶ τοὺς πόδας LXX 2 Kings 4:12 : — Pass., to be mutilated, imperfect, Arar. 3, Thphr. HP 3.6.3; τῆς γυναικὸς τὴν ῥῖνα κολοβοῦσθαι D.S. 1.78; τῇ φώκῃ κεκολοβωμένοι πόδες Arist. HA 487b23, cf. GA 771a2: c. gen., κεκολοβῶσθαι τῶν ἐκτὸς μορίων Id. PA 695b2.
II of Time, curtail, shorten, τὰς ἡμέρας Mark 13:20, cf. Matthew 24:22 (Pass.).
κολοβόω, κολοβω: 1 aorist ἐκολοβωσα; passive, 1 aorist ἐκολοβωθην; 1 future κολοβωθήσομαι; (from κολοβός lopped, mutilated); to cut off (τάς χεῖρας, 2 Samuel 4:12; τούς πόδας, Aristotle, h. a. 1, 1 (p. 487, 24); τήν ῤῖνα, Diodorus 1, 78); to mutilate (Polybius 1, 80, 13); hence in the N. T. of time (Vulg. brevio) to shorten, abridge, curtail: Matthew 24:22; Mark 13:20.
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κολοβόω , -ῶ
(< κολοβός , docked),
[in LXX: 2 Samuel 4:12 (H7112 pi.) *;]
to cut off, amputate (LXX), hence, to curtail, shorten: Matthew 24:22, Mark 13:20.†
Copyright © 1922 by G. Abbott-Smith, D.D., D.C.L.. T & T Clarke, London.
κολοβόω, properly = ";amputate"; (Swete on Mark 13:20 : cf. 2 Kings 4:12). For a form κολοβίζω (not in LS8) of this late verb, cf. IMA iii. 323 (Thera i/B.C. or i/A.D.) τὰ πλείωι κεκολοβισμέ [νων ] καὶ ἀφιρημένων. The subst. κολόβιον, an under-vest with shortened sleeves, occurs in an inventory of property, P Tebt II. 406.17 (c. A.D. 266) κολόβιον λινοῦν δ [ί ]σημον καινόν, ";a new linen shirt with two stripes"; (Edd.) al., and the adj. κολοβός, ";maimed,"; ";mutilated,"; in the description of an ass—μυόχρουν κολοβόν —in P Gen I. 23.5 (A.D. 70) al. : cf. P Petr III. 19 (g).2 (Ptol.), P Oxy I. 43 versov. 9 (iii/A.D.). The epithet ὁ κολοβοδάκτυλος, ";the stump-fingered,"; applied to Mark in iii/A.D. (Hippolytus Philos. vii. 30), has been traced to a desire on the part of the philosophers to ridicule the shortness of his Gospel, but is more probably due to some natural defect of the evangelist himself : see a curious note by Nestle, ZNTW iv. p. 347.
Copyright © 1914, 1929, 1930 by James Hope Moulton and George Milligan. Hodder and Stoughton, London.
Derivative Copyright © 2015 by Allan Loder.