Θεὸν

theós

God

A divine being or deity; in monotheistic or polytheistic contexts, a supernatural, immortal entity regarded as possessing powers beyond those of humans. With the article (ὁ θεός), typically refers to the supreme divinity, especially in monotheistic Israelite/Judean contexts; also, a general term for a god or divine power in Greco-Roman religion. By extension, occasionally used to refer to one exercising divine prerogatives or authority (e.g., magistrate or judge), or used in strong idiomatic phrases to intensify meaning.

G2316

Luke 2:28 · Word #11

Lexicon G2316

Lemmaθεός
Transliterationtheós
Strong'sG2316
DefinitionA divine being or deity; in monotheistic or polytheistic contexts, a supernatural, immortal entity regarded as possessing powers beyond those of humans. With the article (ὁ θεός), typically refers to the supreme divinity, especially in monotheistic Israelite/Judean contexts; also, a general term for a god or divine power in Greco-Roman religion. By extension, occasionally used to refer to one exercising divine prerogatives or authority (e.g., magistrate or judge), or used in strong idiomatic phrases to intensify meaning.

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

PhraseGod
LiteralGod

Lexical Info

Lemmaθεός
Strong'sG2316

SIBI-P1 Translation G2316-05

a deity

Morphological NotesNoun, accusative masculine singular (Gr,N,,,,,AMS); direct-object form of θεός.
Rendering RationaleThe accusative singular form Θεόν denotes a single divine being as the grammatical object. "A deity" preserves the core sense of a supernatural divine entity without importing contextual assumptions about specificity.

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