Lexicon hothen: from where, for which reason Original Word: ὅθενPart of Speech: Adverb Transliteration: hothen Phonetic Spelling: (hoth'-en) Short Definition: whence, wherefore Definition: (a) whence, from which place, (b) wherefore. HELPS word-Studies 3606 hóthen (an adverb, formed from 3739 /hós, "which, where" with the added suffix -then) – properly, from which place; from where, from which. NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originfrom hos,Definitionfrom where, for which reason NASB Translationso (3), there (1), therefore (4), this (1), where (2), which (4).
Thayer's STRONGS NT 3606: ὅθενὅθεν (from the relative pronoun ὁ and the enclitic θεν which denotes motion from a place) (from Homer down), adverb, from which; whence; it is used a. of the place from which: Matthew 12:44; Luke 11:24; Acts 14:26; Acts 28:13; by attraction for ἐκεῖθεν ὅπου etc., Matthew 25:24, 26; cf. Buttmann, § 143, 12; ( Winers Grammar, 159 (150)). b. of the source from which a thing is known, from which, whereby: 1 John 2:18. c. of the cause from which, for which reason, wherefore, on which account (A. V. whereupon (in the first two instances)): Matthew 14:7; Acts 26:19; Hebrews 2:17; Hebrews 3:1; Hebrews 7:25; Hebrews 8:3; Hebrews 9:18; Hebrews 11:19; often in the last three books of Macc.
Strong's from thence, whence From hos with the directive enclitic of source; from which place or source or cause (adverb or conjunction) -- from thence, (from) whence, where(-by, -fore, -upon). see GREEK hos |
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