a greek and english lexicon to the nt, parkhurst, with grammar prefixed, 1845

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respect
to
the
arrangement,
indeed,
of
the
various
senses
of
words,
as
well
for whom
attending
to
the
style
of
the
New
Testament,
to
distinguish
noxious
find,
has
ever
once
mentioned
Pasor's
beginner
occasion
a
great
deal
of
unnecessary
may
not
be
deemed
the
sacred
books
pretty
frequently
scriptural
critics,
Raphelius,
Eisner,
Alberti,
and
Wolfius,
not
to
mention
others
therein
quoted.
However,
as
Mr.
Mall
and
myself
had
he has
trees,
may,
ere
long,
be
enabled,
even
without
the
assistance
of
a
master,
speak
of
the
language
writers.
The
spiritus
dash over
them, thus,
its own
language
than
the
others.]
thus,
rog,
as
the
nominative,
And
note,
that
form
their
oblique
;
from
words
TroXXog
and
jxeyaXoc,
thus,
Sing.
N.
VQ,
rjv,
w,
and
are
declined
after
the
manner
of
substantives,
according
the
indefinite
pronoun
dtiva
a
certain
person
or
thing,
place
hereafter
(3rd
fut.
pass.).
Thus,
ypa0u>,
I
write.
Aor.
distinguished
more
than
these
of
the
aorists,
except
indicative,
but
not
no
augment,
terw
arose
two
new
forms,
the
present
by
changing
w
into
ov,
and
prefixing
the
augment,
as
perfect,
as
passive,
according
to
their
termination;
thus
perf.
mid.
MIDDLE
VOICE.
(see
sect.
iii.
31)
for,
1.
In
verbs
in
a'w,
if
o
aw,
fw,
and
ow.
be
intransitive,
the
same
tense
middle
is
transitive.]
BXaoraVw,
1
fut.
use.
Fut.
yti'Tjffofiat,
perf.
yfyr7//iai,
(so
used
in
the
first
sense,
but
quality,"
as
KaXwg
well,
in
KaXtig
avayivutOKti
he
arises what
right
things.
[But
(1)
very
populous
nation.
10.
The
relative,
as
iXetydvTwv
in
the
nominative.]
[(6)
Hence
genitive,
as
parts
thing
inherited;
and
again,
the
person
from
-whom
one
inherits).
The
part,
is
in
the
genitive
the
mind,
&c.
is
given
as
a
motive,
as
evvoia
avdui,
I
speak
from
good-will.'}
[(d)
The
dat.
also
expresses
the
external
cause,
with
passives,
of
government
in
the
Greek
language
Phil.
i.
the
Metropolis
augment
is
prefixed
11.
Luke
xxiv.
23,
al.
freq.
xpfirai
for
God,
John
the
among
us
(and
we
kind
of
contracted
verbs,
in
ou>
namely,
spake
1st
pers.
sing,
avTOv
6. xxii. 13. Observe
9.
This
word
is
used
in
Clement's
1
Ep.
to
Corinth,
23.
Rom.
a leur
he
meets,
and
Jews
be
not
pressed"
But,
no
doubt,
the
Romans,
(See
Bp.
Bull's
English
Works,
vol.
p.
501.)
But
as
an
angel
presiding
over
every
department
and
particular
in
nature,
the
expressions
in
dlrlnity
degenerate.'}
'Ayia(u,
from
ayioc;
holy.
I.
To
separate,
set
apart,
consecrate^
or
sanctify,
from
type.
Heb.
xv.
2.
'Ayiwavj'tj,
rjg,
rj,
from
a'ytoc.
Sanctification,
sanctity,
45.
any
thing.
iii. 22.
Num. viii.
in
LXX,
sense.
[Xeu.
Cyrop.
xi.
3.]
II.
Violent
Jos.
A.
J.
vi.
6,
2.]
'Ayomo/iai,
from
ayam'a,
strife,
struggle.
is used in
1
"the
brazen-
throated
dog
limited
sense),
exactly
17.]
'AfiiKia,
ac,
i},
from
ddiKOQ
unjust.
I.
Injustice.
Luke
Tim.
ii.
19.
James
iii.
[See
applied
figu-
ratively
to
the
heart.
[In
Eph.
v.
19.
utterly
absurd.
AivWo/ncu
is,
17.
xv.
5.
xxiv.
5.
14.
among
Ckris-
tiaits,
.
only
4.
viii.
47.
Acts
x.
21,
29.
Luke
i.
33.
present
life,
and
the
second,
the
general
state
rection,
Cor.
Comp.
A K
13,
aKavQiva
untnl
or
occ.
Tit.
Heb. iv.
22.
Thus
Macknight.
Comp.
xxi.
9,
;
Heb.
nn
to
break
[Josh.
vi.
10],
all
the
passages
8,
which
see;
and
comp.
2
Sam.
xii.
7-
Eccles.
ix.
8.
See
Bochart,
7,
James
i,
18.
John
i.
14.
viii.
32.
xiv.
17
Kings
ii.
Fabr.
Pseud.
V.
T.
t.
i.
p.
604.]
22.
opposed
to
visionary,