2897. kraipalé
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kraipalé: drunken nausea
Original Word: κραιπάλη, ης, ἡ
Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine
Transliteration: kraipalé
Phonetic Spelling: (krahee-pal'-ay)
Short Definition: drunken dissipation
Definition: drunken dissipation, surfeiting.

NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origin
a prim. word
Definition
drunken nausea
NASB Translation
dissipation (1).

Thayer's
STRONGS NT 2897: κραιπάλῃ

κραιπάλῃ (WH κρεπάλη, see their Appendix, p. 151), κραιπαλης, (from ΚΡΑΣ the head, and πάλλω to toss about; so explained by Galen and Clement of Alexandria, Paedag. 2, 2, 26 and Phryn. in Bekker, Anecd., p. 45, 13 (cf. Vanicek, p. 148)), Latincrapula (i. e. the giddiness and headache caused by drinking wine to excess): Luke 21:34 (A. V. surfeiting; cf. Trench, § lxi.). (Aristophanes Acharn. 277; Alciphron 3, 24; Plutarch, mor., p. 127 f. (de sanitate 11); Lucian, Herodian, 2, 5, 1.)

STRONGS NT 2897: κρεπάλη [κρεπάλη, see κραιπάλῃ.]



Strong's
drunken dissipation

Probably from the same as harpazo; properly, a headache (as a seizure of pain) from drunkenness, i.e. (by implication) a debauch (by analogy, a glut) -- surfeiting.

see GREEK harpazo

2896
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