Λάζαρον

Lázaros

Lazarus

A personal name, Lazarus (from Hebrew Eleazar), commonly referring to two individuals named in the New Testament: (1) a man from Bethany, brother of Martha and Mary, who is the subject of a resurrection narrative in the Gospel of John; (2) a character in a parabolic story in the Gospel of Luke, depicted as a destitute man. The name is a proper noun and does not itself carry semantic content apart from personal identification.

G2976

John 12:9 · Word #23

Lexicon G2976

LemmaΛάζαρος
TransliterationLázaros
Strong'sG2976
DefinitionA personal name, Lazarus (from Hebrew Eleazar), commonly referring to two individuals named in the New Testament: (1) a man from Bethany, brother of Martha and Mary, who is the subject of a resurrection narrative in the Gospel of John; (2) a character in a parabolic story in the Gospel of Luke, depicted as a destitute man. The name is a proper noun and does not itself carry semantic content apart from personal identification.

Morphology N ACC M SG All morphology codes

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

Common Translation

PhraseLazarus
LiteralLazarus

Lexical Info

LemmaΛάζαρος
Strong'sG2976

SIBI-P1 Translation G2976-02

Lazarus

Morphological NotesNoun, accusative, masculine, singular (Gr,N,,,,,AMS); proper name functioning as direct object.
Rendering RationaleThe term is a proper masculine personal name derived from Hebrew Eleazar, meaning "God has helped." As an accusative singular masculine noun, it denotes Lazarus as the direct object, though English does not mark this case distinctly in proper names.

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