Lexicon peismoné: persuasion Original Word: πεισμονή, ῆς, ἡPart of Speech: Noun, Feminine Transliteration: peismoné Phonetic Spelling: (pice-mon-ay') Short Definition: persuasion, conviction Definition: persuasion, conviction, a yielding to persuasion. HELPS word-Studies Cognate: 3988 peismonḗ (a feminine noun derived from 3982 /peíthō, "persuade") – used only of self-produced persuasion (Gal 5:8). NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Originfrom peithóDefinitionpersuasion NASB Translationpersuasion (1).
Thayer's STRONGS NT 3988: πεισμονήπεισμονή, πεισμονης, ἡ ( πείθω, which see; like πλησμονή), persuasion: in an active sense (yet cf. Lightfoot on Gal. as below) and contextually, treacherous or deceptive persuasion, Galatians 5:8 (cf. Winers Grammar, § 68, 1 at the end). (Found besides in Ignat. ad Rom. 3, 3 [ET] longer recens.; Justin Martyr, Apology 1, 53 at the beginning; ( Irenaeus 4, 33, 7); Epiphanius 30, 21; Chrysostom on 1 Thess. 1:3; Apollonius Dyscolus, syntax, p. 195, 10 (299, 17); Eustathius on Homer, Iliad a., p. 21, 46, verse 22; 99, 45, verse 442; i, p. 637, 5, verse 131; and Odyssey, chapter, p. 185, 22, verse 285.)
Strong's persuasion. From a presumed derivative of peitho; persuadableness, i.e. Credulity -- persuasion. see GREEK peitho |
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