Lexical Summary diapantos: mutual irritation Original Word: διαπαντόςTransliteration: diapantos Phonetic Spelling: (dee-ap-an-tos') Short Definition: mutual irritation Meaning: mutual irritation Strong's Concordance always, continually. From dia and the genitive case of pas; through all time, i.e. (adverbially) constantly -- alway(-s), continually. see GREEK dia see GREEK pas Thayer's Greek Lexicon STRONGS NT 1275: διαπαντόςδιαπαντός, see διά, A. II. 1. a. STRONGS NT 1275a: διαπαρατριβήδιαπαρατριβή, διαπαρατριβης, ἡ, constant contention, incessant wrangling or strife, (παρατριβη, attrition; contention, wrangling); a word justly adopted in 1 Timothy 6:5 by G L T Tr WH (for Rec. παραδιατριβαί, which see); not found elsewhere (except Clement of Alexandria, etc.); cf. Winer's Grammar, 102 (96). Cf. the double compounds διαπαρατήρειν, 2 Samuel 3:30; also (doubtful, it must be confessed), διαπαρακύπτομαι, 1 Kings 6:4 Ald.; διαπαροξύνω, Josephus, Antiquities 10, 7, 5. (Stephanus' Thesaurus also gives διαπαράγω, Gregory of Nyssa, ii. 177 b.; διαπαραλαμβάνω; διαπαρασιωπάω, Josephus, Genes., p. 9 a.; διαπαρασύρω, Schol. Lucian. ii. 796 Hemst.) |