ὅλον

hólos

whole

Fully entire, complete, undivided; denoting something in its entirety or as a unified whole as opposed to partial or fragmented. In various contexts, ὅλος describes the totality or completeness of something (such as body, group, day, statement, or quantity) as a single, complete entity rather than in parts or pieces. Secondary senses may include the collective or universal (e.g., "the whole world"), or conveying 'altogether' when used adverbially.

G3650

Luke 11:36 · Word #6

Lexicon G3650

Lemmaὅλος
Transliterationhólos
Strong'sG3650
DefinitionFully entire, complete, undivided; denoting something in its entirety or as a unified whole as opposed to partial or fragmented. In various contexts, ὅλος describes the totality or completeness of something (such as body, group, day, statement, or quantity) as a single, complete entity rather than in parts or pieces. Secondary senses may include the collective or universal (e.g., "the whole world"), or conveying 'altogether' when used adverbially.

Morphology QUAN NOM N SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech QUAN — Quantifier — Indicates amount
Case NOM — Nominative — The subject of the sentence
Gender N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

Phrasewhole
Literalwhole

Lexical Info

Lemmaὅλος
Strong'sG3650

SIBI-P1 Translation G3650-05

the whole

Morphological NotesNeuter nominative singular of the quantifier/adjective ὅλος; used substantively to denote a complete entity as a whole.
Rendering RationaleThe neuter nominative singular form functions substantively, denoting something as a complete, undivided entirety. "The whole" preserves the sense of totality inherent in the root ὅλ- while reflecting its singular neuter form.

View full lexicon entry for G3650 →

SILEX v2