Bible Verse Dictionary
Acts 1:1 - Made
Verse | Strongs No. | Greek | |
---|---|---|---|
The | G3588 | ὁ |
the definite article; the (sometimes to be supplied at others omitted in English idiom) |
former | G4413 | πρῶτος |
[Adjective] foremost (in time place order or importance) |
treatise | G3056 | λόγος |
[Noun Masculine] something said (including the thought); by implication a topic (subject of discourse) also reasoning (the mental faculty) or motive; by extension a computation; specifically (with the article in John) the Divine Expression (that is Christ) |
have | G3303 | μέν |
properly indicative of affirmation or concession (in fact); usually followed by a contrasted clause with G1161 (this one the former etc. |
I made | G4160 | ποιέω |
[Verb] to make or do (in a very wide application more or less direct) |
O | G5599 | ὦ |
as a note of exclamation. oh |
Theophilus | G2321 | Θεόφιλος |
[Noun Masculine] friend of God; Theophilus a Christian |
of | G4012 | περί |
[Preposition] properly through (all over) that is around; figuratively with respect to; used in various applications of place cause or time (with the genitive case denoting the subject or occasion or superlative point; with the accusative case the locality circuit: matter circumstance or general period) |
all | G3956 | πᾶς |
[Adjective] apparently a primary word; all any: every the whole |
that | G3739 | ὅς |
the relative (sometimes demonstrative) pronoun who: which what that |
Jesus | G2424 | Ἰησοῦς |
[Noun Masculine] Jesus (that is Jehoshua) the name of our Lord and two (three) other Israelites |
began | G756 | ἄρχομαι |
[Verb] to commence (in order of time) |
both | G5037 | τέ |
both or also (properly as a correlation of G2532) |
to do | G4160 | ποιέω |
[Verb] to make or do (in a very wide application more or less direct) |
and | G2532 | καί |
[Conjunction] and also: even so: then too etc.; often used in connection (or composition) with other particles or small words |
teach | G1321 | διδάσκω |
[Verb] to teach (in the same broad application) |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.