| Definitions | Number Verses | Only Used In | |
|---|---|---|---|
| emptyo | ἐμπτύσουσιν [2 verses] ( verb 3rd pl fut-ind/aor-subj act ) "Shall spit upon" is emptyo, which means "spit into" and "spit onto." - "Spit upon" is another uncommon verb for Jesus that means "spit into" and "spit onto." In the Greek, this verb comes before, not after, the "scourge" verb. |
2 | |
| en | ἐν [413 verses](prep) "In" is en, which means, with its usual indirect (dative) object, "in," "on," "at," "by," "among," "within," "surrounded by," "in one's hands," "in one's power," "during," and "with" (in the sense of nearness). With a direct (accusative) object, it means "into," "on," and "for." Referring to time, it means. "in the course of" or "during." -- The word translated as "in" means "in," "on," "within," "among" "by" (near), "by" (as an instrument), "during" (time), or "among" with an indirect-object form object. About time, it means "during the time," "in the time," "within," and "in." With the direct object form, it means "into," "on," and "for." |
413 | |
| enatos | ἐνάτην [1 verse](adj sg fem acc) "Ninth" is enatos, which means "ninth." |
1 | |
| endidysko | ἐνεδιδύσκετο [1 verse](verb 3rd sg imperf ind mp) "Was clothed" is endidysko, which means to "put on" oneself or another. Extended form of endyo. Found only in NT and after. -- "Was clothed" is from a Greek verb that Jesus only uses here, which means to "put on" oneself or another. It is an extended form of the common word meaning "put on". This word is only found in the Bible and writings about it. The form is someone acting on themselves, "he put on himself." |
1 | Luke |
| endoxos | ἐνδόξῳ [1 verse](adj sg masc dat) "Gorgeously" is endoxos, which means "held in esteem or honour", "of high repute", of things, "notable", "resting on opinion", "probable", and "generally admitted". - The word translated as "gorgeously" is an adjective meaning "held in esteem or honour", "of high repute", and and "generally admitted". It works like our word "respectable". It is in the same form as the "cloak" above. |
1 |