εἰσελθόντων

eisérchomai

when you enter

To go or come into a location, event, situation, or state; to enter into, physically or by extension, to arrive at or begin participation in something. In literal usage, indicates physical entry into a place; in figurative extensions, entering an event, a condition, a relationship, or a new state of affairs. The verb can also denote the initiation of an action or involvement with a process or group.

G1525

Luke 22:10 · Word #6

Lexicon G1525

Lemmaεἰσέρχομαι
Transliterationeisérchomai
Strong'sG1525
DefinitionTo go or come into a location, event, situation, or state; to enter into, physically or by extension, to arrive at or begin participation in something. In literal usage, indicates physical entry into a place; in figurative extensions, entering an event, a condition, a relationship, or a new state of affairs. The verb can also denote the initiation of an action or involvement with a process or group.

Morphology V AOR ACT PTCP GEN M PL All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense AOR — Aorist — Simple occurrence, often past
Voice ACT — Active — The subject performs the action
Mood PTCP — Participle — A verbal adjective
Case GEN — Genitive — Possession, source, or separation
Gender M — Masculine — Grammatical masculine
Number PL — Plural — More than one

Common Translation

Phrasewhen you enter
Literalhaving-entered

Lexical Info

Lemmaεἰσέρχομαι
Strong'sG1525

SIBI-P1 Translation G1525-19

of those having entered

Morphological NotesVerb; aorist tense (completed action), active voice, participle; genitive case, masculine gender, plural number.
Rendering RationaleThe aorist active participle conveys completed action, rendered as "having entered." The genitive masculine plural is preserved with "of those," maintaining both participial force and case relationship.

View full lexicon entry for G1525 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

of those having entered

Same as P1Yes
RationaleP1 'of those having entered' preserves the participial sense referring to the act of entering, as the Greek participle indicates. Contextual and accurate.