Bible Verse Dictionary
Hebrews 7:27 - For
Verse | Strongs No. | Greek | |
---|---|---|---|
Who | G3739 | ὅς |
the relative (sometimes demonstrative) pronoun who: which what that |
needeth | G2192 | ἔχω |
[Verb] to hold (used in very various applications literally or figuratively direct or remote; such as possession ability: contiguity relation or condition) |
not | G3756 | οὐ |
the absolutely negative (compare G3361) adverb; no or not |
daily | G2596 | κατά |
[Preposition] (preposition) down (in place or time) in varied relations (according to the case [genitive dative or accusative] with which it is joined) |
as | G5618 | ὥσπερ |
[Adverb] just as that is exactly like |
those high priests | G749 | ἀρχιερεύς |
[Noun Masculine] the high priest (literally of the Jews typically Christ); by extension a chief priest |
to offer up | G399 | ἀναφέρω |
[Verb] to take up (literally or figuratively) |
sacrifice | G2378 | θυσία |
[Noun Feminine] sacrifice (the act or the victim literally or figuratively) |
first | G4386 | πρότερον |
[Adjective] previously |
for | G5228 | ὑπέρ |
[Preposition]
|
his own | G2398 | ἴδιος |
[Adjective] pertaining to self that is one's own; by implication private or separate |
sins | G266 | ἁμαρτία |
[Noun Feminine] sin (properly abstract) |
and then | G1899 | ἔπειτα |
[Adverb] thereafter |
for | G5228 | ὑπέρ |
[Preposition]
|
the | G3588 | ὁ |
the definite article; the (sometimes to be supplied at others omitted in English idiom) |
people's for | G5228 | ὑπέρ |
[Preposition]
|
this | G5124 | τοῦτο |
that thing |
he did | G4160 | ποιέω |
[Verb] to make or do (in a very wide application more or less direct) |
once | G2178 | ἐφάπαξ |
[Adverb] upon one occasion (only) |
when he offered up | G399 | ἀναφέρω |
[Verb] to take up (literally or figuratively) |
himself | G1438 | ἑαυτοῦ |
from a reflexive pronoun otherwise obsolete and the genitive (dative or accusative) of G846; him (her it: them also [in conjunction with the personal pronoun of the other persons] my thy: our your) -self (-selves) etc. |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.