Καίσαρι

Kaîsar

Caesar

The title 'Caesar,' originally a personal name, which became the standard designation for the Roman emperor; by extension, refers to the ruler or office of Roman imperial authority. In biblical and Hellenistic contexts, functions as a formal title for the reigning emperor, regardless of the individual’s personal name.

G2541

Luke 20:25 · Word #10

Lexicon G2541

LemmaΚαῖσαρ
TransliterationKaîsar
Strong'sG2541
DefinitionThe title 'Caesar,' originally a personal name, which became the standard designation for the Roman emperor; by extension, refers to the ruler or office of Roman imperial authority. In biblical and Hellenistic contexts, functions as a formal title for the reigning emperor, regardless of the individual’s personal name.

Morphology N DAT M SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech N — Noun — A person, place, thing, or idea
Case DAT — Dative — Indirect object, means, or location
Gender M — Masculine — Grammatical masculine
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

PhraseCaesar
LiteralCaesar-to

Lexical Info

LemmaΚαῖσαρ
Strong'sG2541

SIBI-P1 Translation G2541-02

to the emperor

Morphological NotesNoun, masculine, singular, dative (Gr,N,,,,,DMS) — dative singular form of Καῖσαρ.
Rendering RationaleThe lemma denotes the Roman imperial title ‘Caesar,’ meaning the reigning emperor. The dative singular form is rendered with the English preposition ‘to’ to reflect the dative case while preserving the title’s authoritative sense.

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