φρεναπατάω: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

νύμφην τ' ἄνυμφον παρθένον τ' ἀπάρθενον → wife unwed and virgin that is no virgin | bride that is no bride, virgin that is virgin no more | virgin wife and widowed maid | unwed bride and ravished virgin

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{{Thayer
{{Thayer
|txtha=φρεναπάτω; ([[φρεναπάτης]], [[which]] [[see]]): τινα, to [[deceive]] anyone's [[mind]], ἀπαταν, for it brings [[out]] the [[idea]] of subjective fancies" (Lightfoot ad loc.); cf. Green, Critical Notes at the [[passage]]). (Ecclesiastical and Byzantine writings.)  
|txtha=φρεναπάτω; ([[φρεναπάτης]], [[which]] [[see]]): τινα, to [[deceive]] anyone's [[mind]], ἀπαταν, for it brings [[out]] the [[idea]] of subjective fancies" (Lightfoot ad loc.); cf. Green, Critical Notes at the [[passage]]). (Ecclesiastical and Byzantine writings.)  
}}
{{lsm
|lsmtext='''φρενᾰπᾰτάω:''' μέλ. <i>-ήσω</i>, [[εξαπατώ]], σε Καινή Διαθήκη
}}
}}

Revision as of 02:32, 31 December 2018

Click links below for lookup in third sources:
Full diacritics: φρενᾰπᾰτάω Medium diacritics: φρεναπατάω Low diacritics: φρεναπατάω Capitals: ΦΡΕΝΑΠΑΤΑΩ
Transliteration A: phrenapatáō Transliteration B: phrenapataō Transliteration C: frenapatao Beta Code: frenapata/w

English (LSJ)

   A deceive, ἑαυτόν Ep.Gal.6.3.

German (Pape)

[Seite 1304] die Seele täuschen, bethören, verführen, N. T.

French (Bailly abrégé)

-ῶ :
tromper, séduire.
Étymologie: φρήν, ἀπατάω.

English (Strong)

from φρεναπάτης; to be a mind-misleader, i.e. delude: deceive.

English (Thayer)

φρεναπάτω; (φρεναπάτης, which see): τινα, to deceive anyone's mind, ἀπαταν, for it brings out the idea of subjective fancies" (Lightfoot ad loc.); cf. Green, Critical Notes at the passage). (Ecclesiastical and Byzantine writings.)

Greek Monotonic

φρενᾰπᾰτάω: μέλ. -ήσω, εξαπατώ, σε Καινή Διαθήκη