x

Biblia Todo Logo
idiomas
Biblical Greek

«

Strong's Greek #1356 - διοπετής, ές diopetés (fallen from heaven)


Original Word: διοπετής, ές
Transliteration: diopetés
Definition: fallen from heaven
Part of Speech: Adjective
Phonetic Spelling: (dee-op-et'-ace)
............................................................................................................................

Strong's Exhaustive Concordance

which fell down from Jupiter.

From the alternate of Zeus and the alternate of pipto; sky-fallen (i.e. An aerolite) -- which fell down from Jupiter.

see GREEK Zeus

see GREEK pipto


Thayer's Greek Lexicon

Strong's 1356: διοπετής

διοπετής, διοπετες (from Διός of Zeus, and πέτω for πίπτω; in secular writings also Διιπετής), fallen from Zeus, i. e. from heaven: τό διοπετες, namely, ἄγαλμα (which is expressed in Euripides, Iph. T. 977; Herodian, 1, 11, 2 (1, Bekker edition; cf. Winer's Grammar, 234 (219); 592 (551)), an image of the Ephesian Artemis which was supposed to have fallen from heaven, Acts 19:35; (cf. Meyer at the passage; Farrar, St. Paul, 2:13f).

Englishman's Concordance (References)

Strong's Greek: 1356. διοπετής (diopetés) — 1 Occurrence

Acts 19:35 - Adj-GMS
GRK: καὶ τοῦ διοπετοῦς
NAS: Artemis and of the [image] which fell down from heaven?
KJV: and of the [image] which fell down from Jupiter?
INT: and of that fallen from the sky

»
Follow us:




Advertisements