Lexicon ekphobos: terrified Original Word: ἔκφοβος, ονPart of Speech: Adjective Transliteration: ekphobos Phonetic Spelling: (ek'-fob-os) Short Definition: greatly terrified Definition: greatly terrified, horrified. HELPS word-Studies 1630 ékphobos (an adjective, derived from 1537 /ek, "wholly out," intensifying 5401 /phóbos, "fear") – properly, wholly frightened (literally out of one's wits), i.e. with the outcome of becoming extremely fearful (affrighted, terrified); "exceedingly terrified" (A-S) with a deep fear; "sore afraid" (note the intensifying force of the prefix, ek). NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originfrom ek and phobosDefinitionterrified NASB Translationfull of fear (1), terrified (1).
Thayer's STRONGS NT 1630: ἔκφοβοςἔκφοβος, ἐκφοβον, stricken with fear or terror, exceedingly frightened, terrified: Mark 9:6; Hebrews 12:21 from Deuteronomy 9:19. ( Aristotle, physiogn. 6 (p. 812b, 29); Plutarch, Fab. 6.)
Strong's frightened out of one's wits; sore afraid. From ek and phobos; frightened out of one's wits: sore afraid, exceedingly fear. see GREEK ek see GREEK phobos |
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