Strong's Lexicon helkoó: To wound, to ulcerate, to cause sores Original Word: ἑλκόω NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originfrom helkos Definition to wound, to ulcerate, pass. to suffer from sores NASB Translation covered with sores (1). Thayer's Greek Lexicon STRONGS NT 1669: ἑλκόωἑλκόω, ἕλκω: to make sore, cause to ulcerate (Hippocrates and medical writers); passive to be ulcerated; perfect participle passive ἡλκωμένος (L T Tr WH εἱλκωμένος (WHs Appendix, p. 161; Winers Grammar, § 12, 8; Buttmann, 34 (30))), full of sores: Luke 16:20 (Xenophon, de re. eq. 1, 4; 5, 1). Strong's Exhaustive Concordance full of sores or ulcersFrom helkos; to cause to ulcerate, i.e. (passively) be ulcerous -- full of sores. see GREEK helkos Forms and Transliterations ειλκωμενος εἱλκωμένος ηλκωμένος eilkomenos eilkōmenos heilkomenos heilkoménos heilkōmenos heilkōménosLinks Interlinear Greek • Interlinear Hebrew • Strong's Numbers • Englishman's Greek Concordance • Englishman's Hebrew Concordance • Parallel TextsEnglishman's Concordance Luke 16:20 V-RPM/P-NMSGRK: πυλῶνα αὐτοῦ εἱλκωμένος NAS: at his gate, covered with sores, KJV: his gate, full of sores, INT: gate of him being full of sores |



