Bible Verse Dictionary
Acts 10:10 - Hungry
Verse | Strongs No. | Greek | |
---|---|---|---|
And | G1161 | δέ |
[Conjunction] but and etc. |
he became | G1096 | γίνομαι |
[Verb] to cause to be ( |
very hungry | G4361 | πρόσπεινος |
[Adjective] hungering further that is intensely hungry |
and | G1161 | δέ |
[Conjunction] but and etc. |
would | G2309 | θέλω |
[Verb] apparently strengthened from the alternate form of G138; to determine (as an active voice option from subjective impulse; whereas G1014 properly denotes rather a passive voice acquiescence in objective considerations) that is choose or prefer (literally or figuratively); by implication to wish that is be inclined to (sometimes adverbially gladly); impersonally for the future tense to be about to; by Hebraism to delight in |
have eaten | G1089 | γεύομαι |
[Verb] to taste; by implication to eat; figuratively to experience (good or ill) |
but | G1161 | δέ |
[Conjunction] but and etc. |
while they | G1565 | ἐκεῖνος |
that one (or [neuter] thing); often intensified by the article prefixed |
made ready | G3903 | παρασκευάζω |
[Verb] to furnish aside that is get ready |
he fell | G1968 | ἐπιπίπτω |
[Verb] to embrace (with affection) or seize (with more or less violence; literally or figuratively) |
into | G1909 | ἐπί |
[Preposition] of rest (with the dative case) at on etc.; of direction (with the accusative case) towards upon etc.: about (the times) above after against among as long as (touching) at beside X-(idiom) have charge of (be- [where-]) fore in (a place as much as the time of -to) (because) of (up-) on (behalf of) over (by for) the space of through (-out) (un-) to (-ward) with. In compounds it retains essentially the same import at |
a | 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 |
trance | G1611 | ἔκστασις |
[Noun Feminine] a displacement of the mind that is bewilderment |
Definitions are taken from Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
by James Strong (S.T.D.) (LL.D.) 1890.