ἐγερθῇ
egeírō
is risen up
to cause to rise or stand up; to awaken or arouse from sleep, rest, or inactivity; to bring to life or restore to activity. In physical contexts, refers to rousing someone from sleep or a state of rest, causing to stand, or raising to an upright position. In biological or figurative contexts, used of restoring the sick, raising the dead, or bringing to renewed life or vigor. In extended or metaphorical uses, can indicate awakening feelings, stirring to action, or bringing something into public view or prominence.
Luke 13:25 · Word #4
Lexicon G1453
| Lemma | ἐγείρω |
| Transliteration | egeírō |
| Strong's | G1453 |
| Definition | to cause to rise or stand up; to awaken or arouse from sleep, rest, or inactivity; to bring to life or restore to activity. In physical contexts, refers to rousing someone from sleep or a state of rest, causing to stand, or raising to an upright position. In biological or figurative contexts, used of restoring the sick, raising the dead, or bringing to renewed life or vigor. In extended or metaphorical uses, can indicate awakening feelings, stirring to action, or bringing something into public view or prominence. |
Morphology V AOR PASS SUBJ 3P SG
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | V — Verb — An action or state of being |
| Tense | AOR — Aorist — Simple occurrence, often past |
| Voice | PASS — Passive — The subject receives the action |
| Mood | SUBJ — Subjunctive — Expresses possibility or purpose |
| Person | 3P — 3rd person — The one spoken about ("he/she/it/they") |
| Number | SG — Singular — One |
Common Translation
| Phrase | is risen up |
| Literal | might-be-raised |
Lexical Info
| Lemma | ἐγείρω |
| Strong's | G1453 |
SIBI-P1 Translation G1453-22
was raised up
| Morphological Notes | Verb; aorist tense (simple past), passive voice (subject receives action), indicative mood (statement of fact), 3rd person singular. |
| Rendering Rationale | The aorist passive indicative, 3rd singular, denotes a completed past action in which the subject received the action. "Was raised up" preserves the passive voice and reflects the root sense of being caused to rise or be brought from a state of rest or inactivity. |
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