Lexicon tuptó: to strike, smite, beat Original Word: τύπτωPart of Speech: Verb Transliteration: tuptó Phonetic Spelling: (toop'-to) Short Definition: I beat, strike, wound, inflict punishment Definition: I beat, strike, wound, inflict punishment. NAS Exhaustive Concordance Word Origina prim. verb Definitionto strike, smite, beat NASB Translationbeat (3), beating (5), hits (1), strike (2), struck (1), wounding (1).
Thayer's STRONGS NT 5180: τύπτωτύπτω; imperfect ἔτυπτον; present passive infinitive τύπτεσθαι; from Homer down; the Sept. for חִכָּה; to strike, smite, beat (with a staff, a whip, the fist, the hand, etc.): τινα, Matthew 24:49; Luke 12:45; Acts 18:17; Acts 21:32; Acts 23:3; τό στόμα τίνος, Acts 23:2; τό πρόσωπον τίνος, Luke 22:64 (here L brackets; T Tr WH omit the clause); τινα ἐπί ( Tdf. εἰς) τῇ σιαγόνα, Luke 6:29; εἰς τήν κεφαλήν τίνος, Matthew 27:30; ( τήν κεφαλήν τίνος, Mark 15:19); ἑαυτῶν τά στήθη (Latin plangere pectora), of mourners, to smite their breasts, Luke 23:48; also ἔτυπτεν εἰς τό στῆθος, Luke 18:13 (but G L T Tr WH omit εἰς). God is said τύπτειν to smite one on whom he inflicts punitive evil, Acts 23:3 ( Exodus 8:2; 2 Samuel 24:17; Ezekiel 7:9; 2 Macc. 3:39). to smite metaphorically, i. e. to wound, disquiet: τήν συνείδησιν τίνος, one's conscience, 1 Corinthians 8:12 ( ἵνα τί τύπτει σε ἡ καρδία σου; 1 Samuel 1:8; τόν δέ ἄχος ὀξύ κατά φρένα τυψε βαθεῖαν, Homer, Iliad 19, 125; Καμβυσεα ἐτυψε ἡ ἀληθηιη τῶν λόγων, Herodotus 3, 64).
Strong's beat, smite, strike, wound. A primary verb (in a strengthened form); to "thump", i.e. Cudgel or pummel (properly, with a stick or bastinado), but in any case by repeated blows; thus differing from paio and patasso, which denote a (usually single) blow with the hand or any instrument, or plesso with the fist (or a hammer), or rhapizo with the palm; as well as from tugchano, an accidental collision); by implication, to punish; figuratively, to offend (the conscience) -- beat, smite, strike, wound. see GREEK paio see GREEK patasso see GREEK plesso see GREEK rhapizo see GREEK tugchano |