Bible Verse Dictionary
Acts 9:32 - Down
Verse | Strongs No. | Greek | |
---|---|---|---|
And | G1161 | δέ |
[Conjunction] but and etc. |
it came to | G4314 | πρός |
[Preposition] a preposition of direction; forward to that is toward (with the genitive case the side of that is pertaining to; with the dative case by the side of that is near to; usually with the accusative case the place time occasion or respect which is the destination of the relation that is whither or for which it is predicated) |
pass | G1096 | γίνομαι |
[Verb] to cause to be ( |
as Peter | G4074 | Πέτρος |
[Noun Masculine] a (piece of) rock (larger than G3037); as a name Petrus an apostle |
passed | G1330 | διέρχομαι |
[Verb] to traverse (literally) |
throughout | G1223 | διά |
[Preposition] through (in very wide applications local causal or occasional). In composition it retains the same general import |
all | G3956 | πᾶς |
[Adjective] apparently a primary word; all any: every the whole |
quarters he came down | G2718 | κατέρχομαι |
[Verb] to come (or go) down (literally or figuratively) |
also | G2532 | καί |
[Conjunction] and also: even so: then too etc.; often used in connection (or composition) with other particles or small words |
to | G4314 | πρός |
[Preposition] a preposition of direction; forward to that is toward (with the genitive case the side of that is pertaining to; with the dative case by the side of that is near to; usually with the accusative case the place time occasion or respect which is the destination of the relation that is whither or for which it is predicated) |
the | G3588 | ὁ |
the definite article; the (sometimes to be supplied at others omitted in English idiom) |
saints | G40 | ἅγιος |
[Adjective] sacred (physically pure morally blameless or religious ceremonially consecrated) |
which dwelt | G2730 | κατοικέω |
[Verb] to house permanently that is reside (literally or figuratively) |
at Lydda | G3069 | Λύδδα |
[Noun Location] Lydda (that is Lod) a place in Palestine |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.