Lectionary Calendar
Tuesday, November 26th, 2024
the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
Attention!
Take your personal ministry to the Next Level by helping StudyLight build churches and supporting pastors in Uganda.
Click here to join the effort!

Bible Lexicons

Old & New Testament Greek Lexical DictionaryGreek Lexicon

Strong's #945 - βαττολογέω

Transliteration
battologéō
Phonetics
bat-tol-og-eh'-o
Origin
from Battos (a proverbial stammerer) and (G3056)
Parts of Speech
verb
TDNT
1:597,103
Search for…
Browse by letter:
Prev Entry
βάτραχος
 
Next Entry
βδέλυγμα
Definition   
Thayer's
  1. to stammer
  2. to repeat the same things over and over, to use many idle words, to babble, prate. Some suppose the word derived from Battus, a king of Cyrene, who is said to have stuttered; others from Battus, an author of tedious and wordy poems.
Frequency Lists
Verse Results
ASV (2)
Matthew 2
BSB (1)
Matthew 1
CSB (1)
Matthew 1
ESV (2)
Matthew 1
KJV (2)
Matthew 2
LEB (0)
The Lexham English Bible
did not use
this Strong's Number
LSB (3)
Matthew 3
N95 (3)
Matthew 3
NAS (3)
Matthew 3
NLT (2)
Matthew 2
WEB (2)
Matthew 2
YLT (1)
Matthew 1
Liddell-Scott-Jones Definitions

βαττο-λογέω,

= βατταρίζω, speak stammeringly, say the same thing over and over again, Matthew 6:7, Simp. in Epict. p.91D.

Thayer's Expanded Definition

βαττολογέω (T WH βατταλογέω (with א B, see WH's Appendix, p. 152)), βαττολόγω: 1 aorist subjunctive βαττολογήσω;

a. to stammer, and, since stammerers are accustomed to repeat the same sounds,

b. to repeat the same things over and over, to use many and idle words, to babble, prate; so Matthew 6:7, where it is explained by ἐν τῇ πολυλογία, (Vulg. multum loqui; (A. V. to use vain repetitions)); cf. Tholuck at the passage Some suppose the word to be derived from Battus, a king of Cyrene, who is said to have stuttered (Herodotus 4, 155); others from Battus, an author of tedious and wordy poems; but comparing βατταρίζειν, which has the same meaning, and βάρβαρος (which see), it seems fax more probable that the word is onomatopoetic. (Simplicius, in Epictetus (ench. 30 at the end), p. 340, Schweigh edition.)


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

*† βατταλογέω , -

(Rec. βαττολ -, D, βλαττ - = βατταρίζω , prob. onomatop.; v. MM, s v; DCG, ii, 499b, 790 a);

to stammer, repeat idly: Matthew 6:7 (Cremer, 765).†


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

In D this word is βλαττολογέω , the form of which suggests an approximation towards the Latin blatero—[query cf. provincial English blether, with same meaning, both starting from *mlatero]. The Latin text (d) has not the word, so that if Latin influence is recognizable here it must lie somewhere in the complex history of the Bezan text itself. Βαττολογέω may be by haplology for βατταλολογέω , in which some connexion may be suspected with Βάτταλος on the one side, the nickname of Demosthenes, and Aramaic battâl (";leer, nichtig,"; says Wellhausen on Matthew 6:7) on the other. Whether Greek or Aramaic, or neither, is the borrower, we must not stay to ask. If the great orator was thus nicknamed because of the torrent of words at his command, which made envious rivals call him ";the gabbler, it will fit his case better than the highly improbable ";stammering"; connexion, and will suit the ἐν τη πολυλογίᾳ by which the verb is explained in Matthew 6:7. (See Holden on Plutarch’s Demosthenes, ch. iv.)

 

 


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
βατταλογησητε βατταλογήσητε βαττολογήσητε βδέλλη battalogesete battalogēsēte battalogḗsete battalogḗsēte
 
adsfree-icon
Ads FreeProfile