Strong's Concordance plastos: formed, molded Original Word: πλαστός, ή, όνPart of Speech: Adjective Transliteration: plastos Phonetic Spelling: (plas-tos') Definition: formed, molded Usage: formed, molded; fig: feigned, made up, counterfeit. HELPS Word-studies 4112 plastós – (from 4111 /plássō, "to mold by using clay, wax, etc.," which is the root of the English term, "plastic") – properly, shaped according to a mold (predesign); (figuratively) "made-up," fabricated, i.e. unrealistic ("forged" from something artificial); contrived. 4112 /plastós ("plastic, fabricated"), used only in 2 Pet 2:3, refers to "words molded at will to suit their vain imaginations" (M. Vincent). That is, "fabricated words from 4111 (plássō), 'to mould,' as in clay or wax. The idea is, therefore, of words moulded at will to suit their vain imaginations" (WS, 329). These are spun by a "pretender" (i.e. someone not authentic). [In the papyri, plastos means, "forged " (P Oxy II. 237.viii.14, NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originfrom plassó Definition formed, molded NASB Translation false (1). Thayer's Greek Lexicon STRONGS NT 4112: πλαστόςπλαστός, πλαστη, πλαστον (πλάσσω); 1. properly, moulded, formed, as from clay, wax, stone (Hesiod, Plato, Aristotle, Plutarch, others). 2. tropically, feigned: 2 Peter 2:3 ((Herodotus 1, 68), Euripides, Xenophon, Lucian, others). From plasso; moulded, i.e. (by implication) artificial or (figuratively) fictitious (false) -- feigned. see GREEK plasso |