Lexicon dusbastaktos: Hard to bear, burdensome Original Word: δυσβάστακτος Strong's Exhaustive Concordance grievous, hard to bear. From dus- and a derivative of bastazo; oppressive -- grievous to be borne. see GREEK dus- see GREEK bastazo HELPS Word-studies 1419 dysbástaktos (an adjective, derived from 1418 /dys-, "problematic, difficult" and 941 /bastázō, "bear along") – properly, doubly heavy, describing what is difficult or oppressive to carry (bear). 1419 (dysbástaktos) is very emphatic because both of the roots convey "difficulty" ("grievous burden"). NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originfrom dus- and bastaktos (borne); from bastazó Definition hard to be borne, oppressive NASB Translation hard to bear (1). Thayer's Greek Lexicon STRONGS NT 1419: δυσβάστακτοςδυσβάστακτος, δυσβάστακτον (βαστάζω), hard (A. V. grievous) to be borne: Matthew 23:4 (T WH text omit; Tr brackets δυσβάστακτος and Luke 11:46 φορτία δυσβάστακτα, said of precepts hard to obey, and irksome. (the Sept. Proverbs 27:3; Philo, omn. prob. book § 5; Plutarch, quaest. nat. c. 16, 4, p. 915 f.) Forms and Transliterations δυσβαστακτα δυσβάστακτα δυσβάστακτον dusbastakta dysbastakta dysbástaktaLinks Interlinear Greek • Interlinear Hebrew • Strong's Numbers • Englishman's Greek Concordance • Englishman's Hebrew Concordance • Parallel TextsEnglishman's Concordance Matthew 23:4 Adj-ANPGRK: βαρέα καὶ δυσβάστακτα καὶ ἐπιτιθέασιν INT: heavy and hard to bear and lay [them] Luke 11:46 Adj-ANP |