προφήτευμα
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
English (LSJ)
-ατος, τό, prophecy, oracular utterance, Phot. and Suid.s.v. θεοπροπία.
German (Pape)
[Seite 797] τό, die Prophezeiung, Sp., wie Phot. v. θεοπροπία.
Greek (Liddell-Scott)
προφήτευμα: τό, ἡ ἐκ θεοῦ προφητεία, Σουΐδ. ἐν λ. θεοπροπία, ἴδε καὶ Φώτ.
Greek Monolingual
-εύματος, τὸ, Μ
βλ. προφήτεμα.
Translations
prophecy
Afrikaans: voorspelling; Albanian: profeci; Amharic: ትንቢት; Arabic: نُبُوءَة, تَنَبُّؤ; Armenian: մարգարեություն; Azerbaijani: peyğəmbərlik; Belarusian: прароцтва; Bulgarian: пророчество, предсказание; Catalan: profecia; Chinese Mandarin: 預言/预言; Czech: proroctví; Danish: profeti, spådom; Dutch: voorspelling; Finnish: profetia; French: prophétie; Galician: profecía; Georgian: წინასწარმეტყველება; German: Prophezeiung, Weissagung; Gothic: 𐍀𐍂𐌰𐌿𐍆𐌴𐍄𐌾𐌰; Greek: προφητεία; Ancient Greek: εἴρα, θεοπροπία, θεοπρόπιον, μαντεία, ὁ προφητικὸς λόγος, προαγόρευμα, προθέσπισμα, προθεωρία, προκήρυξις, πρόνοια, προνοίη, πρόρρημα, προφητεία, προφήτευμα, προφητικὸς λόγος, φοίβησις, χρησμολογία, χρησμῳδία; Hebrew: נְבוּאָה; Hindi: भविष्यवाणी; Hungarian: jóslat, prófécia; Icelandic: spá; Irish: tairngreacht, fáistine; Italian: profezia; Japanese: 予言; Khmer: ព្យាករណ៍; Korean: 예언; Latin: vaticinium, fatus; Macedonian: пророштво; Malayalam: പ്രവചനം; Maori: kupu whakaari, poropititanga; Ngazidja Comorian: nubua; Norwegian Bokmål: profeti, spådom; Nynorsk: spådom; Old English: wītgung; Ottoman Turkish: پیغامبرلك; Plautdietsch: Profeetie; Polish: proroctwo, przepowiednia; Portuguese: profecia; Quechua: watuy; Romanian: profeție; Russian: пророчество, предсказание; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: пророчанство, пророштво; Roman: proročánstvo, pròroštvo; Slovak: proroctvo; Slovene: prerokba; Spanish: profecía; Swahili: utabiri; Swedish: profetia; Tagalog: hawo; Turkish: vahiy; Ukrainian: пророцтво; Vietnamese: tiên tri; Yiddish: נבֿואה