πεπληρωκέναι

plēróō

I have fully preached

To make full, to fill up, or cause to abound; to complete something so that nothing is lacking. In extended senses: (1) to fill a container or space; (2) to complete a required time or task; (3) to fulfill or bring to realization (an obligation, requirement, word, or prophecy); (4) to bring to full measure or maturity (of character, knowledge, etc.); (5) to carry out or accomplish fully (assigned duties, command, or role). Thus, depending on context, πληρόω can mean to physically fill, to bring to a state of completeness, or to fulfill in the sense of carrying out what was previously planned or foretold.

G4137

Romans 15:19 · Word #19

Lexicon G4137

Lemmaπληρόω
Transliterationplēróō
Strong'sG4137
DefinitionTo make full, to fill up, or cause to abound; to complete something so that nothing is lacking. In extended senses: (1) to fill a container or space; (2) to complete a required time or task; (3) to fulfill or bring to realization (an obligation, requirement, word, or prophecy); (4) to bring to full measure or maturity (of character, knowledge, etc.); (5) to carry out or accomplish fully (assigned duties, command, or role). Thus, depending on context, πληρόω can mean to physically fill, to bring to a state of completeness, or to fulfill in the sense of carrying out what was previously planned or foretold.

Morphology V PRF ACT INF All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense PRF — Perfect — Completed action with ongoing results
Voice ACT — Active — The subject performs the action
Mood INF — Infinitive — The verbal idea without person/number

Common Translation

PhraseI have fully preached
Literalto-have-fully-preached

Lexical Info

Lemmaπληρόω
Strong'sG4137

SIBI-P1 Translation G4137-09

to have fully completed

Morphological NotesVerb; perfect tense (completed action with ongoing result), active voice, infinitive mood.
Rendering RationaleThe perfect active infinitive denotes an action brought to completion with abiding results. "To have fully completed" preserves the root sense of bringing something to fullness or completion while reflecting the perfect aspect and infinitive form.

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