γενόμενα

gínomai

done

to become, to come into being, to happen; primarily denotes the process of transition from one state to another, the coming into existence or reality of something that was not previously so. In various contexts, it can also mean to occur, take place, arise, develop, or change; sometimes serves as a circumlocution for 'to be' when indicating the process or result of becoming, rather than simple existence. Used of events, states, and sometimes of persons or things coming to be in a particular role or status.

G1096

Luke 4:23 · Word #16

Lexicon G1096

Lemmaγίνομαι
Transliterationgínomai
Strong'sG1096
Definitionto become, to come into being, to happen; primarily denotes the process of transition from one state to another, the coming into existence or reality of something that was not previously so. In various contexts, it can also mean to occur, take place, arise, develop, or change; sometimes serves as a circumlocution for 'to be' when indicating the process or result of becoming, rather than simple existence. Used of events, states, and sometimes of persons or things coming to be in a particular role or status.

Morphology V AOR MID PTCP ACC N PL All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense AOR — Aorist — Simple occurrence, often past
Voice MID — Middle — The subject acts on itself or in its own interest
Mood PTCP — Participle — A verbal adjective
Case ACC — Accusative — Direct object or extent
Gender N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter
Number PL — Plural — More than one

Common Translation

Phrasedone
Literalhaving-become

Lexical Info

Lemmaγίνομαι
Strong'sG1096

SIBI-P1 Translation G1096-47

having come into being

Morphological NotesVerb; aorist tense (simple/completed aspect), middle voice, participle; accusative neuter plural.
Rendering RationaleThe aorist participle conveys a completed process of becoming, while the middle voice reflects involvement in the transition. "Having come into being" preserves the root sense of emergence or occurrence rather than a static state.

View full lexicon entry for G1096 →

SILEX v2