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Monday, November 25th, 2024
the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
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Bible Lexicons

Old & New Testament Greek Lexical DictionaryGreek Lexicon

Strong's #777 - ἄσιτος

Transliteration
ásitos
Phonetics
as'-ee-tos
Origin
from (G1) (as a negative particle) and (G4621)
Parts of Speech
adjective
TDNT
None
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ἀσιτία
 
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Definition   
Thayer's
  1. fasting, without having eaten
Frequency Lists
Verse Results
ASV (1)
Acts 1
BSB (0)
Acts 1
CSB (1)
Acts 1
ESV (1)
Acts 1
KJV (1)
Acts 1
LEB (0)
The Lexham English Bible
did not use
this Strong's Number
LSB (2)
Acts 2
N95 (2)
Acts 2
NAS (2)
Acts 2
NLT (0)
The New Living Translation
did not use
this Strong's Number
WEB (1)
Acts 1
YLT (1)
Acts 1
Liddell-Scott-Jones Definitions

ἄσῑτ-ος, ον,

I without food, fasting, Od. 4.788, S. Aj. 324, E. Med. 24, Th. 7.40, Phryn.Com. 3 D., etc.; ἰχθύς Pl.Com. 29. Adv. -ως Mantiss.Prov. 1.47: ἀσιτί LXX Job 24:6.

II of forbidden food, εὐωχία ἄ. Ph. 2.398 (dub.l.).

Thayer's Expanded Definition

ἄσιτος, ἀσιτον (σῖτος), fasting; without having eaten: Acts 27:33. (Homer, Odyssey 4, 788; then from Sophocles and Thucydides down.)


Thayer's Expanded Greek Definition, Electronic Database.
Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2006, 2011 by Biblesoft, Inc.
All rights rserved. Used by permission. BibleSoft.com
Abbott-Smith Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament

* ἄσιτος , -ον

(< - neg., σῖτος ),

fasting, without eating (cf. MM, s.v.): Acts 27:33.†


Abbott-Smith Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament.
Copyright © 1922 by G. Abbott-Smith, D.D., D.C.L.. T & T Clarke, London.
Vocabulary of the Greek NT

We can illustrate the derived verb from the curious letter quoted under ἀσθενέω , where the context points clearly to absence of food, and not abstinence therefrom—P Lond 144.3ff. (i/A.D. ?) (= II. p. 253) νωθρευσαμένου μου καὶ ἀσειτήσαντος ἡμέρας δύο ὥστε με μετὰ τῶν νομάρχων μηδὲ συνδιπνῆσαι . The editor conjectures that the writer may have been in the desert, and that the nomarchs with whom he ";did not even dine"; were the officials who superintended the transport of goods from one village to another. The vernacular evidence therefore does not go far to decide the much discussed significance of the subst. in Acts 27:21 And, on the whole, in view of the undoubted use of ἀσιτία in medical phraseology to denote ";loss of appetite"; from illness (as Hipp. Morb. 454 τήκεται ὁ ἀσθενῶν ὑπὸ ὀδυνέων ἰσχυρῶν καὶ ἀσιτίης καὶ βηχός : other exx. in Hobart, Medical Language of St. Luke, p. 276), it seems best to understand it so here, and to think of Paul’s companions as abstaining from food owing to their physical and mental state, and not because no food was forthcoming. See further Knowling in EGT ad l., and the note by J. R. Madan in JTS vi. p. 116 ff.

 

 


The Vocabulary of the Greek New Testament.
Copyright © 1914, 1929, 1930 by James Hope Moulton and George Milligan. Hodder and Stoughton, London.
Derivative Copyright © 2015 by Allan Loder.
List of Word Forms
ασιτοι ασιτοί άσιτοι ἄσιτοι asitoi ásitoi
 
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