1114. goés
Strong's Concordance
goés: a wailer, a sorcerer, a swindler
Original Word: γόης, ητος, ὁ
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Transliteration: goés
Phonetic Spelling: (go'-ace)
Definition: a wailer, a sorcerer, a swindler
Usage: a conjuror, juggler, sorcerer; a tricky (crafty) deceiver, imposter.
HELPS Word-studies

1114 góēs – originally, a sorcerer (in ancient Greek literature); in NT times, 1114 (góēs) is a swindler – a shameless cheat pretending to use supernatural power; an actor (cheap imposter), looking for self-gain, i.e. posing to be someone he isn't.

1114 /góēs ("a charlatan"), used only in 2 Tim 3:13, refers to a seducer (properly, a wailer) – a fraud who "sounds off" like a whining enchanter. This person uses their verbal spells and incantations to give the (false) impression they can do miracles.

NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origin
from goaó (to wail)
Definition
a wailer, a sorcerer, a swindler
NASB Translation
impostors (1).

Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 1114: γόης

γόης, γοητος, (γοάω to bewail, howl);

1. a wailer, howler: Aeschylus choëph. 823 (Hermann, et al. γοητής).

2. a juggler, enchanter (because incantations used to be uttered in a kind of howl).

3. a deceiver, impostor: 2 Timothy 3:13; (Herodotus, Euripides, Plato, and subsequent writers).

Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
seducer.

From goao (to wail); properly, a wizard (as muttering spells), i.e. (by implication) an imposter -- seducer.

Forms and Transliterations
γοητες γόητες goetes goētes góetes góētes
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Englishman's Concordance
2 Timothy 3:13 N-NMP
GRK: ἄνθρωποι καὶ γόητες προκόψουσιν ἐπὶ
NAS: men and impostors will proceed
KJV: and seducers shall wax
INT: men and impostors will advance to

Strong's Greek 1114
1 Occurrence


γόητες — 1 Occ.









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