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Old & New Testament Greek Lexical Dictionary Greek Lexicon
Strong's #2364 - θυγάτηρ
- Thayer
- Strong
- Mounce
- a daughter
- a daughter of God
- acceptable to God, rejoicing in God's peculiar care and protection
- with the name of a place, city, or region
- denotes collectively all its inhabitants and citizens
- a female descendant
- a daughter of God
- Book
- Word
- Parsing
did not use
this Strong's Number
θῠγάτηρ [ ᾰ], ἡ,
gen. θυγᾰτέρος contr. θυγατρός; dat. θυγᾰτέρι, θυγατρί; acc. θυγᾰτέρα θύγατρα Il. 1.13; voc. θύγᾰτερ: nom. pl. θυγατέρες, and lyr. θύγατρες 9.144, Sapph. Supp. 20a. 16: gen. pl. -τέρων IG 22.832.19, Pl. R. 461c, poet. -τρῶν: dat. pl. -τράσι -τέρεσσι Il. 15.197; both sets of forms are found in poetry, θυγατρός, -τρί, -τράσι are used in Prose: —
I daughter, Il. 9.148, 290, Od. 4.4, etc.; θύγατρες ἵππων, of mules, Simon. 7; θ. ταύρων, of bees, Philo Tars. ap. Gal. 13.269: metaph., Μοισᾶν θυγατέρες, of Odes, Pi. N. 4.3; πλάστιγξ ἡ χαλκοῦ θ. Critias 1.9D.; θ. Σειληνοῦ, of the vine, Jul. Caes. 25; ψήφου συμβολικῆς θ., of a λάγυνος, AP 6.248 (Mar Arg.); of villages dependent on a city, LXX Judges 1:27, 1 Maccabees 5:8.
II later, maidservant, slave, Phalar. 142.3. [ ῡ in in the longer forms, metri gr.] (Cf. Skt. duhitár-, Engl. daughter, etc.)
θυγάτηρ, genitive θυγατρός, dative θυγατρί, accusative θυγατέρα, vocative θύγατερ, plural θυγατέρες, accusative θυγατέρας, ἡ (of the same root as Gothicdauhtar, English daughter, German Tochter (Curtius, § 318; Vanicek, p. 415)); Hebrew בַּת; (from Homer down); a daughter: properly, Matthew 9:18; Matthew 10:35, 37; Matthew 15:22; Acts 7:21, etc. improperly,
a. the vocative (or nominative as vocative cf. Winers Grammar, § 29, 2; Buttmann, § 129 a. 5; WH's Appendix, p. 158) in kindly address: Matthew 9:22; Mark 5:34 (L Tr WH θυγάτηρ); Luke 8:48 (Tr WH θυγάτηρ) (see υἱός 1 a. at the end, τέκνον, b. α.).
b. in phrases modeled after the Hebrew: α. a daughter of God i. e. acceptable to God, rejoicing in God's peculiar care and protection: 2 Corinthians 6:18 (Isaiah 43:6; Wis. 9:7; see υἱός τοῦ Θεοῦ 4, τέκνον b. γ.). β. with the name of a place, city, or region, it denotes collectively all its inhabitants and citizens (very often so in the O. T., as Isaiah 37:22; Jeremiah 26:19
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θυγάτηρ , -τρός , ἡ
(for use of vocat., cf. M, Pr., 71; WH, App, 158),
[in LXX for H1323 (Genesis 5:4, al.), exc. Judges 21:14 B, 2 Chronicles 21:17 (H802;]
daughter: Matthew 9:18; Matthew 10:35; Matthew 10:37; Matthew 14:6; Matthew 15:22; Matthew 15:28, Mark 5:35; Mark 6:22; Mark 7:26; Mark 7:29, Luke 2:36; Luke 8:42; Luke 8:49; Luke 12:53, Acts 2:17 (LXX) Acts 7:21; Acts 21:9, Hebrews 11:24. In NT, as in OT, not in cl.;
(a) as a form of friendly address (cf. Ruth 2:2; Ruth 2:22 al.): Matthew 9:22, Mark 5:34, Luke 8:48;
(b) metaph.: sc. κυρίου , 2 Corinthians 6:18 (cf. Isaiah 43:6);
(c) of posterity: θ . Ἀαρών , Luke 1:5; Ἀβραάμ , Luke 13:16 (cf. Isaiah 16:2, 4 Maccabees 15:28, al);
(d) of habitation: θ . Σιών , Ἱερουσαλήμ , Matthew 21:5 (LXX), Luke 23:28, John 12:15 (cf. Isaiah 1:8, Zechariah 9:9, al.).†
Copyright © 1922 by G. Abbott-Smith, D.D., D.C.L.. T & T Clarke, London.
This common word (MGr θυγατέρα) hardly needs illustration, but we may refer to the formula κατὰ θυγατροποΐαν δέ, which is found in the inscrr. for the adoption of females, corresponding to καθ᾽ υἱοθεσίαν δέ, for males : see Deissmann BS, p. 239.
Copyright © 1914, 1929, 1930 by James Hope Moulton and George Milligan. Hodder and Stoughton, London.
Derivative Copyright © 2015 by Allan Loder.