955. Beliar
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Lexicon
Beliar: "lord of the forest," Beliar, a name of Satan
Original Word: Βελίαρ, ὁ
Part of Speech: Proper Noun, Indeclinable
Transliteration: Beliar
Phonetic Spelling: (bel-ee'-al)
Short Definition: Beliar
Definition: Belial, a demon, and in fact a name for Satan.

HELPS word-Studies

955 Belíal (transliterated from the OT 1100 /glṓssa, "worthless, vile, wickedness") – Belial, an appellation of Satan which stresses his deep-seated wickedness – "the one who is utterly worthless because vile."

NAS Exhaustive Concordance
Word Origin
of uncertain origin
Definition
"lord of the forest," Beliar, a name of Satan
NASB Translation
Belial (1).

Thayer's
STRONGS NT 955: Βελιαλ

Βελιαλ, (בְּלִיַעַל worthlessness, wickedness), Belial, a name of Satan, 2 Corinthians 6:15 in Rec.bez elz L. But Βελιάρ (which see) is preferable (see WHs Appendix, p. 159; Buttmann, 6).

STRONGS NT 955: ΒελιάρΒελιάρ, , indeclinable, Beliar, a name of Satan in 2 Corinthians 6:15 Rec.st G T Tr WH, etc. This form is either robe ascribed (as most suppose) to the harsh Syriac pronunciation of the word Βελιαλ (q. v.), or must be derived from יַעַר בֵּל lord of the forest, i. e. who rules over forests and deserts (cf. the Sept. Isaiah 13:21; Matthew 12:43; (BB. DD. under the word , especially Alex.'s Kitto)). Often in ecclesiastical writings

STRONGS NT 955a: βελόνηβελόνη, βελόνης, (βέλος);

a. the point of a spear.

b. a needle: Luke 18:25 L T Tr WH; see ῤαφίς. ((Batr. 130), Aristophanes, Aeschines, Aristotle, others; cf. Lob. ad Phryn., p. 90.)



Strong's
Belial.

Of Hebrew origin (bliya'al); worthlessness; Belial, as an epithet of Satan -- Belial.

see HEBREW bliya'al

954
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