ἐμὰ
emós
mine
Denoting possession or association with the first person singular ('my,' 'mine,' 'belonging to me'). Used to indicate something or someone that pertains to or is associated with the speaker, either in terms of personal possession, relationship, or responsibility. In context, it may intensify the sense of personal relation, distinguishing what is specifically one’s own from what might generally be associated with someone else.
Luke 15:31 · Word #14
Lexicon G1699
| Lemma | ἐμός |
| Transliteration | emós |
| Strong's | G1699 |
| Definition | Denoting possession or association with the first person singular ('my,' 'mine,' 'belonging to me'). Used to indicate something or someone that pertains to or is associated with the speaker, either in terms of personal possession, relationship, or responsibility. In context, it may intensify the sense of personal relation, distinguishing what is specifically one’s own from what might generally be associated with someone else. |
Morphology PRO.P 1P NOM N PL
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | PRO.P — Personal Pronoun — Refers to persons |
| Person | 1P — 1st person — The speaker ("I" / "we") |
| Case | NOM — Nominative — The subject of the sentence |
| Gender | N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter |
| Number | PL — Plural — More than one |
Common Translation
| Phrase | mine |
| Literal | my |
Lexical Info
| Lemma | ἐμός |
| Strong's | G1699 |
SIBI-P1 Translation G1699-01
the things that are mine
| Morphological Notes | Personal possessive pronoun (from ἐμός); nominative, neuter, plural; first person singular possession; substantival use. |
| Rendering Rationale | The form ἐμὰ is nominative neuter plural, functioning substantivally to denote items or matters belonging to the speaker. "The things that are mine" preserves both the possessive force of the root and the neuter plural morphology. |
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