the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
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Bible Lexicons
Old & New Testament Greek Lexical Dictionary Greek Lexicon
Strong's #1436 - ἔα
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- interjection expressive of indignation, or of wonder mixed with fear, ha! ah!
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did not use
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did not use
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did not use
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did not use
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ἔᾱ,
exclam. of surprise or displeasure, ha! oho ! esp. before a question, ἔα, τί χρῆμα; A. Pr. 300, E. Or. 1573; ἔα, τίς οὗτος..; Id. Hec. 501, cf. 733, al.; ἔα, τίς ἔσθ'; Ar. Pl. 824; sts. extra versum, E. Hec. 1116, Med. 1005, al.; sts. doubled, ἔ. ἔα, ἄπεχε A. Pr. 688 (lyr.); ἔα [ἔα], ἰδού S. OC 1477 (lyr.). — Rare in Prose, ἔα, ἔφη, σοφισταί τινες Pl. Prt. 314d; ἔα, τί ἡμῖν καὶ σοί; Luke 4:34.
ἔα, an interjection expressive of indignation, or of wonder mixed with fear (derived apparently from the imperative present of the verb ἐάν (according to others a natural instinctive, sound)), frequent in the Attic poets, rare in prose writings (as Plato, Prot., p. 314 d.), "Ha! Ah!": Mark 1:24 R G; Luke 4:34; cf. Fritzsche on Mark, p. 32f.
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ἔα ,
interj., expressing surprise, indignation, fear (in cl. chiefly in poët.),
ah! ha!: Luke 4:34.†
Copyright © 1922 by G. Abbott-Smith, D.D., D.C.L.. T & T Clarke, London.