Bible Verse Dictionary
John 18:11 - Drink
| Verse | Strongs No. | Greek | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Then | G3767 | οὖν |
(adverbially) certainly or (conjugationally) accordingly |
| said | G2036 | ἔπω |
[Verb] to speak or say (by word or writting) |
| Jesus | G2424 | Ἰησοῦς |
[Noun Masculine] Jesus (that is Jehoshua) the name of our Lord and two (three) other Israelites |
| unto Peter | G4074 | Πέτρος |
[Noun Masculine] a (piece of) rock (larger than G3037); as a name Petrus an apostle |
| Put up | G906 | βάλλω |
[Verb] to throw (in various applications more or less violent or intense) |
| thy | G4675 | σοῦ |
of thee thy |
| sword | G3162 | μάχαιρα |
[Noun Feminine] a knife that is dirk; figuratively war judicial punishment |
| into | G1519 | εἰς |
[Preposition] to or into (indicating the point reached or entered) of place time or (figuratively) purpose (result etc.); also in adverbial phrases. |
| the | G3588 | ὁ |
the definite article; the (sometimes to be supplied at others omitted in English idiom) |
| sheath | G2336 | θήκη |
[Noun Feminine] a receptacle that is scabbard |
| the | G3588 | ὁ |
the definite article; the (sometimes to be supplied at others omitted in English idiom) |
| cup | G4221 | ποτήριον |
[Noun Neuter] a drinking vessel; by extension the contents thereof that is a cupful (draught); figuratively a lot or fate |
| which | G3739 | ὅς |
the relative (sometimes demonstrative) pronoun who: which what that |
| my Father | G3962 | πατήρ |
[Noun Masculine] a |
| hath given | G1325 | δίδωμι |
[Verb] to give (used in a very wide application properly or by implication literally or figuratively; greatly modified by the connection) |
| me | G3427 | μοί |
to me |
| shall I not | G3364 | οὐ μή |
a double negative strengthening the denial; not at all |
| drink | G4095 | πίνω |
[Verb] to imbibe (literally or figuratively) |
| it | G846 | αὐτός |
backward); the reflexive pronoun self used (alone or in the compound of G1438) of the third person and (with the proper personal pronoun) of the other persons |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.