3552. noseó
Strong's Concordance
noseó: to be sick
Original Word: νοσέω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: noseó
Phonetic Spelling: (nos-eh'-o)
Definition: to be sick
Usage: I am diseased, hence of mental or spiritual disease.
NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origin
from nosos
Definition
to be sick
NASB Translation
has a morbid interest (1), morbid interest (1).

Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 3552: νοσέω

νοσέω, νόσῳ; (νόσος); from (Aeschylus), Herodotus down; to be sick; metaphorically, of any ailment of the mind (ἀνηκέστω πονηρία νόσειν Ἀθηναιους, Xenophon, mem. 3, 5, 18 and many other examples in Greek authors): περί τί, to be taken with such an interest in a thing as amounts to a disease, to have a morbid fondness for, 1 Timothy 6:4 (περί δόξαν, Plato, mor., p. 546 d.).

Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
dote.

From nosos; to be sick, i.e. (by implication, of a diseased appetite) to hanker after (figuratively, to harp upon) -- dote.

see GREEK nosos

Forms and Transliterations
νοσων νοσών νοσῶν noson nosôn nosōn nosō̂n
Links
Interlinear GreekInterlinear HebrewStrong's NumbersEnglishman's Greek ConcordanceEnglishman's Hebrew ConcordanceParallel Texts
Englishman's Concordance
1 Timothy 6:4 V-PPA-NMS
GRK: ἐπιστάμενος ἀλλὰ νοσῶν περὶ ζητήσεις
NAS: nothing; but he has a morbid interest in controversial questions
KJV: nothing, but doting about questions
INT: knowing but unhealthy about questions

Strong's Greek 3552
1 Occurrence


νοσῶν — 1 Occ.









3551
Top of Page
Top of Page