1420. dusenterion
Strong's Concordance
dusenterion: dysentery
Original Word: δυσεντερία, ας, ἡ
Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine
Transliteration: dusenterion
Phonetic Spelling: (doos-en-ter-ee'-ah)
Definition: dysentery
Usage: dysentery.
NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origin
from dus- and enteron (intestine)
Definition
dysentery
NASB Translation
dysentery (1).

Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 1420: δυσεντερίᾳ

δυσεντερίᾳ, δυσεντεριας, (ἔντερον, intestine), dysentery (Latintormina intestinorum, bowel-complaint): Acts 28:8 R G; see the following word. (Hippocrates and medical writers; Herodotus, Plato, Aristotle, Polybius, others.)

STRONGS NT 1420: δυσεντέριονδυσεντέριον, δυσεντεριου, τό, a later form for δυσεντερίᾳ, which see: Acts 28:8 LT Tr WH. Cf. Lob. ad Phryn., p. 518.

Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
dysentery

From dus- and a comparative of entos (meaning a bowel); a "dysentery" -- bloody flux.

see GREEK dus-

see GREEK entos

Forms and Transliterations
δυσεντερία δυσεντεριω δυσεντερίῳ dusenterio dusenteriō dysenterio dysenteriō dysenteríoi dysenteríōi
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Englishman's Concordance
Acts 28:8 N-DFS
GRK: πυρετοῖς καὶ δυσεντερίῳ συνεχόμενον κατακεῖσθαι
NAS: with [recurrent] fever and dysentery; and Paul
KJV: a fever and of a bloody flux: to whom
INT: fevers and dysentery oppressed with lay sick

Strong's Greek 1420
1 Occurrence


δυσεντερίῳ — 1 Occ.

















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