Λύδδα

Lýdda

Lydda

A proper noun denoting the town of Lydda, known in Hebrew as Lod, a settlement located in the coastal plain of Roman-era Judea. Used in the Greek as a geographical place name referring specifically to this locality, most notably as the site of events described in Acts 9 in the New Testament. The term in Greek texts designates the same location as the Hebrew Lod, and does not carry additional metaphorical or transferred meanings.

G3069

Acts 9:35 · Word #7

Lexicon G3069

LemmaΛύδδα
TransliterationLýdda
Strong'sG3069
DefinitionA proper noun denoting the town of Lydda, known in Hebrew as Lod, a settlement located in the coastal plain of Roman-era Judea. Used in the Greek as a geographical place name referring specifically to this locality, most notably as the site of events described in Acts 9 in the New Testament. The term in Greek texts designates the same location as the Hebrew Lod, and does not carry additional metaphorical or transferred meanings.

Morphology N ACC F SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech N — Noun — A person, place, thing, or idea
Case ACC — Accusative — Direct object or extent
Gender F — Feminine — Grammatical feminine
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

PhraseLydda
LiteralLydda

Lexical Info

LemmaΛύδδα
Strong'sG3069

SIBI-P1 Translation G3069-01

Lydda

Morphological NotesNoun, feminine, singular, accusative; proper place name in direct-object form.
Rendering RationaleThe lemma denotes the specific Judean town known in Hebrew as Lod. As an accusative feminine singular proper noun, its form marks it as the direct object or object of motion, though English does not alter the place name’s form for case.

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