Lexicon
dilogos: given to repetition, double-tongued
Original Word: δίλογος, ονPart of Speech: Adjective
Transliteration: dilogos
Phonetic Spelling: (dil'-og-os)
Short Definition: double-tongued, deceitful
Definition: double-tongued, deceitful.
HELPS word-Studies
1351 dílogos (an adjective, derived from 1364 /dís, "twice" and 3004 /légō, "to speak to a conclusion") – properly, "double-saying," i.e. deceitful by saying one thing but meaning another – literally, "two-sayings" ("double-tongued," used only in 1 Tim 3:8).
1351 /dílogos ("double-speaking") describes someone leaving a deliberate misimpression – acting like a spiritual "weathervane" by reversing their position (taking different sides of an issue whenever it is convenient or expedient). This person is unstable (vacillating), "speaking out of both sides of their mouth."
[1351 /dílogos ("double-tongued") does "not occur in the LXX or in classical writers. It means saying one thing and meaning another, and making different representations to different people about the same thing" (WS, 1028).]
NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Originfrom
dis and
logosDefinitiongiven to repetition, double-tongued
NASB Translationdouble-tongued (1).