Lexical Summary baskainō: to slander, to bewitch Original Word: βασκαίνωTransliteration: baskainō Phonetic Spelling: (bas-kah'-ee-no) Part of Speech: Verb Short Definition: to slander, to bewitch Meaning: to slander, to bewitch Strong's Concordance bewitch. Akin to phasko; to malign, i.e. (by extension) to fascinate (by false representations) -- bewitch. see GREEK phasko Thayer's Greek Lexicon STRONGS NT 940: βασκαίνωβασκαίνω: 1 aorist ἐβασκανα, on which form cf. Winers Grammar, (75 (72)); 83 (80); (Buttmann, 41 (35); Lob. ad Phryn., p. 25f; Paralip., p. 21f); (βάζω, βάσκω (φάσκω) to speak, talk); τινα (Winer's Grammar, 223 (209)); 1. to speak ill of one, to slander, traduce him (Demosthenes 8, 19 (94, 19); Aelian v. h. 2, 13, etc.). 2. to bring evil on one by feigned praise or an evil eye, to charm, bewitch one (Aristotle, probl. 20, 34 (p. 926{b}, 24); Theocritus, 6, 39; Aelian nat. an. 1, 35); hence, of those who lead away others into error by wicked arts (Diodorus 4, 6): Galatians 3:1. Cf. Schott (or Lightfoot) at the passage; Lob. ad Phryn., p. 462. |