ἀνοιγῶσιν

anoígō

To open (literally), such as to unclose a door, gate, or any physical object; in extended or figurative senses, to make accessible or reveal, including opening something to understanding, disclosing information, or enabling an event or opportunity. Its primary sense is physical opening, but it is commonly used in a wide range of figurative contexts in Hellenistic Greek literature and biblical texts, including the opening of eyes (awakening perception), mouth (to speak), heart (to understand or feel), heavens (to reveal divine action), or a scroll/book (to grant access to contents).

G455

Matthew 20:33 · Word #5

Lexicon G455

Lemmaἀνοίγω
Transliterationanoígō
Strong'sG455
DefinitionTo open (literally), such as to unclose a door, gate, or any physical object; in extended or figurative senses, to make accessible or reveal, including opening something to understanding, disclosing information, or enabling an event or opportunity. Its primary sense is physical opening, but it is commonly used in a wide range of figurative contexts in Hellenistic Greek literature and biblical texts, including the opening of eyes (awakening perception), mouth (to speak), heart (to understand or feel), heavens (to reveal divine action), or a scroll/book (to grant access to contents).

Morphology V AOR PASS SUBJ 3P PL All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense AOR — Aorist — Simple occurrence, often past
Voice PASS — Passive — The subject receives the action
Mood SUBJ — Subjunctive — Expresses possibility or purpose
Person 3P — 3rd person — The one spoken about ("he/she/it/they")
Number PL — Plural — More than one

Lexical Info

Lemmaἀνοίγω
Strong'sG455

SIBI-P1 Translation G455-15

they may be opened

Morphological NotesVerb; aorist passive subjunctive, 3rd person plural (Gr,V,SAP3,,P,)
Rendering RationaleThe aorist tense conveys a simple act of opening, the passive voice indicates the subjects receive the action, and the subjunctive mood expresses potential or purpose. "They may be opened" preserves both the passive form and the root sense of being unclosed or made accessible.

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