εἰδῶ

eídō

I know

Primarily, to see, perceive, observe with the senses or mind; to know or understand as a result of perceiving. In a number of contexts, εἴδω conveys not merely the act of seeing with the eyes but also the mental apprehension or realization based on perception (i.e., 'to know', 'to recognize', 'to understand'). In perfect forms, it most frequently means 'to have seen' and thus 'to know' as a state based on acquired knowledge through seeing or experiencing. The full semantic range covers literal seeing, noticing, perceiving, observing, as well as understanding or being aware.

G1492

1 Corinthians 13:2 · Word #6

Lexicon G1492

Lemmaεἴδω
Transliterationeídō
Strong'sG1492
DefinitionPrimarily, to see, perceive, observe with the senses or mind; to know or understand as a result of perceiving. In a number of contexts, εἴδω conveys not merely the act of seeing with the eyes but also the mental apprehension or realization based on perception (i.e., 'to know', 'to recognize', 'to understand'). In perfect forms, it most frequently means 'to have seen' and thus 'to know' as a state based on acquired knowledge through seeing or experiencing. The full semantic range covers literal seeing, noticing, perceiving, observing, as well as understanding or being aware.

Morphology V PRF ACT SUBJ 1P SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense PRF — Perfect — Completed action with ongoing results
Voice ACT — Active — The subject performs the action
Mood SUBJ — Subjunctive — Expresses possibility or purpose
Person 1P — 1st person — The speaker ("I" / "we")
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

PhraseI know
LiteralI-know

Lexical Info

Lemmaεἴδω
Strong'sG1492

SIBI-P1 Translation G1492-10

I may know

Morphological NotesVerb; perfect tense, active voice, subjunctive mood, first person singular.
Rendering RationaleThe perfect active subjunctive, first person singular, expresses a potential or desired state of knowing grounded in prior perception. The perfect form of εἴδω commonly carries the sense of settled knowledge resulting from having seen.

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