A Greek-English Reference Manual To The Vocabulary Of The Greek New Testament. Based on Tischendorf’s Greek New Testament Text and on Strong’s Greek Lexicon With Some Additions and Amendments


Book Description

Intended for students and busy pastors, this book addresses the needs of readers struggling with any textual portion of Greek New Testament scripture for a quick and handy reference. The word entries (the actual Greek New Testament vocabulary) are directly taken from the Greek text of Tischendorf’s Greek New Testament edition according to the Codex Sinaiticus and linked to the English word definitions and other essential information based on Strong’s renowned Greek-English lexicon. To be used in conjunction with the Greek New Testament and Word Concordance edition (ISBN 978-3-95935-358-8) by the same compiler.







The Athenaeum


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A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament


Book Description

With a Strong's Concordance, anyone can use the numbering system, even without knowing Greek.







Thayer's Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament


Book Description

For over a century, Thayer's has been lauded as one of the best New Testament lexicons available for any student of New Testament Greek. This lexicon provides dictionary definitions for each word and relates each word to its New Testament usage and categorizes its nuances of meaning. It also offers exhaustive coverage of New Testament Greek words, as well as extensive quotation of extra-biblical word usage and background sources consulted and quoted. This lexicon is coded to Strong's for those with little or no Greek knowledge.




Vocabulary of the Greek Testament


Book Description

Beginning in the late nineteenth century, large numbers of Greek papyri dating to the early Christian period were discovered in Egypt. Some of these contain biblical texts or fragments of Hellenistic literature, but many others are nonliterary: private letters, records of business transactions and civil proceedings, etc. New Testament scholars soon recognized that this corpus of new material could in many cases illuminate usages in the Greek New Testament for which exact parallels had never been located in classical Greek literature. For the first time it was possible to recognize that "New Testament Greek" was not a peculiar Hebraic-Greek dialect but an expression of the "Koine" Greek commonly used in everyday life throughout the eastern Mediterranean world. In the first decade of the 1900s, James Hope Moulton asked George Milligan to join him in assembling data from the papyri regarding particular New Testament words. After Moulton's death in 1915, Milligan continued the work. The result was the publication of The Vocabulary of the Greek Testament in fascicles between 1914 and 1929 and in a single-volume edition in 1930. This work has been reprinted a number of times, and New Testament scholars still consider it a standard reference. Milligan's 14-page introduction describes the papyri and their significance for our understanding of the language of the New Testament. Then, after a table of abbreviations, follow 705 pages of entries in alphabetical order. The entries are given in Greek script, but in this new reprint Strong's numbers have been added to make the work more accessible to those with limited knowledge of Greek. Another important new addition is an index of New Testament passages. This thorough index, meticulously prepared under the direction of Professor Daniel B. Wallace of Dallas Theological Seminary, will greatly enhance the usefulness of this classic work for scholars, pastors, and all who wish to delve more deeply into the meanings of New Testament words.