ἐγερθείς

egeírō

to cause to rise or stand up; to awaken or arouse from sleep, rest, or inactivity; to bring to life or restore to activity. In physical contexts, refers to rousing someone from sleep or a state of rest, causing to stand, or raising to an upright position. In biological or figurative contexts, used of restoring the sick, raising the dead, or bringing to renewed life or vigor. In extended or metaphorical uses, can indicate awakening feelings, stirring to action, or bringing something into public view or prominence.

G1453

Romans 8:34 · Word #10

Lexicon G1453

Lemmaἐγείρω
Transliterationegeírō
Strong'sG1453
Definitionto cause to rise or stand up; to awaken or arouse from sleep, rest, or inactivity; to bring to life or restore to activity. In physical contexts, refers to rousing someone from sleep or a state of rest, causing to stand, or raising to an upright position. In biological or figurative contexts, used of restoring the sick, raising the dead, or bringing to renewed life or vigor. In extended or metaphorical uses, can indicate awakening feelings, stirring to action, or bringing something into public view or prominence.

Morphology V AOR PASS PTCP NOM M SG 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 PTCP — Participle — A verbal adjective
Case NOM — Nominative — The subject of the sentence
Gender M — Masculine — Grammatical masculine
Number SG — Singular — One

Lexical Info

Lemmaἐγείρω
Strong'sG1453

SIBI-P1 Translation G1453-23

having been raised

Morphological NotesVerb; aorist tense (completed action), passive voice (subject acted upon), participle mood; nominative masculine singular.
Rendering RationaleThe aorist passive participle denotes a completed action received by the subject. "Having been raised" preserves the passive voice and reflects the root sense of being awakened, roused, or brought up from a state of rest or inactivity.

View full lexicon entry for G1453 →

SILEX v2