Open Bible Data Home About News OET Key
OET OET-RV OET-LV ULT UST BSB BLB AICNT OEB WEBBE WMBB NET LSV FBV TCNT T4T LEB BBE Moff JPS Wymth ASV DRA YLT Drby RV Wbstr KJB-1769 KJB-1611 Bshps Gnva Cvdl TNT Wyc SR-GNT UHB BrLXX BrTr Related Topics Parallel Interlinear Reference Dictionary Search
MainId: 000241000000000
Version: 0
HasAramaic: False
InLXX: True
AlphaPos: α
StrongCodes: G0245
BaseForms:
BaseFormID: 000241001000000
PartsOfSpeech: adjc.
Inflections:
Lemma: ἀλλότριος
BaseFormIndex: 1
Realizations: -α, -ον
RelatedLemmas: {'Word': 'ἀλλάσσω', 'Meanings': []}
LEXMeanings:
LEXID: 000241001001000
LEXIsBiblicalTerm: Y
LEXEntryCode: 92.20
LEXIndent: 0
LEXDomains: Discourse Referentials
LEXSubDomains: Whom or What Spoken or Written About
LEXSenses:
LanguageCode: en
LastEdited: 2021-05-24 18:16:03
DefinitionShort: a reference to what belongs to someone else
Glosses: ['belonging to another', 'belonging to someone else']
LEXReferences: LUKE 16:12, ACTs 7:6, ROM 14:4, ROM 15:20, 2COR 10:15, 2COR 10:16, 1TIM 5:22, HEB 9:25
LEXID: 000241001002000
LEXIsBiblicalTerm: M
LEXEntryCode: 11.74
LEXIndent: 0
LEXDomains: Groups and Classes of Persons and Members of Such Groups and Classes
LEXSubDomains: Socio-Political
LEXSenses:
LanguageCode: en
LastEdited: 2021-05-24 18:16:03
DefinitionShort: a person from another geographical or cultural region and/or one not known to members of the socio-political group in question
Glosses: ['stranger', 'foreigner']
Comments: In {S:04301000500028} the most satisfactory rendering of ‘stranger’ is often ‘someone who is not known,’ in other words, ‘they will not follow someone whom they do not know’ or ‘… recognize.’
LEXReferences: MAT 17:25, MAT 17:26, YHN 10:5, YHN 10:5, HEB 11:9
LEXID: 000241001003000
LEXIsBiblicalTerm: M
LEXEntryCode: 39.12
LEXIndent: 0
LEXDomains: Hostility, Strife
LEXSubDomains: Opposition, Hostility
LEXSenses:
LanguageCode: en
LastEdited: 2021-05-24 18:16:03
DefinitionShort: pertaining to being opposed as a result of one’s being essentially different
Glosses: ['to be strongly opposed to', 'to be an enemy of']
Comments: Meanings involving enmity, hostility, and opposition are frequently idiomatic in nature and are derived primarily from four major experiential sources: (1) psychological attitudes, ‘to have one’s heart burn against’; (2) gestures, ‘to frown against’ or ‘to refuse to snap fingers’ (snapping fingers being a particular form of greeting in various parts of Africa); (3) body stance, ‘to stand against’; and (4) movement, ‘to turn one’s back against’ or ‘to turn away from.’
LEXReferences: HEB 11:34