Bible Verse Dictionary
Hebrews 11:3 - Appear
| Verse | Strongs No. | Greek | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Through faith | G4102 | πίστις | [Noun Feminine] persuasion that is credence; moral conviction (of religious truth or the truthfulness of God or a religious teacher) especially reliance upon Christ for salvation; abstractly constancy in such profession; by extension the system of religious (Gospel) truth itself | 
| we understand | G3539 | νοιέω | [Verb] to exercise the mind (observe) that is (figuratively) to comprehend heed | 
| that the | G3588 | ὁ | the definite article; the (sometimes to be supplied at others omitted in English idiom) | 
| worlds | G165 | αἰών | [Noun Masculine] properly an age; by extension perpetuity (also past); by implication the world; specifically (Jewish) a Messianic period (present or future) | 
| were framed | G2675 | καταρτίζω | [Verb] to complete thoroughly that is repair (literally or figuratively) or adjust | 
| by the | G3588 | ὁ | the definite article; the (sometimes to be supplied at others omitted in English idiom) | 
| word | G4487 | ῥῆμα | [Noun Neuter] an utterance (individually collectively or specifically); by implication a matter or topic (especially of narration command or dispute); with a negative naught whatever | 
| of | G1537 | ἐκ | [Preposition] literally or figuratively; direct or remote) | 
| God | G2316 | θεός | [Noun Masculine] a deity especially (with G3588) the supreme Divinity; figuratively a magistrate; by Hebraism very | 
| so that things which are seen | G991 | βλέπω | [Verb] to look at (literally or figuratively) | 
| were not | G3361 | μή | (adverbially) not (conjugationally) lest; also (as interrogitive implying a negative answer [whereas G3756 expects an affirmative one]); whether | 
| made | G1096 | γίνομαι | [Verb] to cause to be ( | 
| of | G1537 | ἐκ | [Preposition] literally or figuratively; direct or remote) | 
| things which do appear | G5316 | φαίνω | [Verb] to lighten (shine) that is show (transitive or intransitive literal or figurative) | 
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.
