and
(2nd part) is noticeable; the use of the latter comes under No. 1 (e); (d) in
general, “a man, a male person” (used like the pronoun
, No. 3), “a man” (i.e., a certain
“man”), e.g., Luke 8:41; in the plural, Acts 6:11.
3.
(
&
, 5100), “some one, a certain one,” is rendered “a man,” “a certain man,”
e.g., in Matt. 22:24; Mark 8:4,
KJV
(
RV
, “one”); 12:19; John 3:3, 5; 6:50; 14:23; 15:6, 13;
Acts 13:41,
KJV
(
RV
, “one”); 1 Cor. 4:2; 1 Tim. 1:8; 2 Tim. 2:5, 21; Jas. 2:14, 18; 1 Pet.
2:19; 1 John 4:20.
4.
and
(
/9:
, 730): see
MALE
.
5.
(
!
, 5046), perfect, is translated “men” in 1 Cor. 14:20,
RV
marg., “of
full age,”
KJV
marg., “perfect, or, of a ripe age.” See
PERFECT
.
Note:
In many cases the word “man” is combined with an adjective to translate one
word in the original. These will be found under various other headings.
For
MAN CHILD
see
MALE
MAN’S, OF MAN, MANKIND (see also
MEN
)
(
$0
, 442), “human, belonging to man” (from
, see
MAN
, No. 1), is used (a) of man’s wisdom, in 1 Cor. 2:13 (some mss. have it in v. 4,
where indeed it is implied; see, however, the
RV
); (b) of “man’s judgement,” 1 Cor. 4:3
(marg., “day”: see
DAY
); (c) of “mankind,” Jas. 3:7, lit., “the human nature,”
RV
marg.
(
KJV
marg., “nature of man”); (d) of human ordinance, 1 Pet. 2:13; Moulton and Milligan
show from the papyri how strongly antithetic to the divine the use of the word is in this
respect; (e) of temptation, 1 Cor. 10:13,
RV
, “such as man can bear” (
KJV
, “such as is
common to man”), i.e., such as must and does come to “men”; () of “men’s” hands, Acts
17:25; (g) in the phrase “after the manner of men,” Rom. 6:19.¶
Notes:
(1) In Luke 16:12,
KJV
,
, “belonging to another” (
, “another”),
here used as a pronoun, is translated “another man’s” (
RV
, “another’s”); so, as an
adjective, in Rom. 14:4; 15:20; 2 Cor. 10:15, 16 (in this last the
RV
omits “man”). (2) In
Acts 27:22 there is no word representing “man’s”; the
RV
has “of life.” (3) In Rom. 5:17,
the
RV
rightly has “the trespass of the one,” for
KJV
, “one man’s offense.”
MANGER
(
1
, 5336), “a manger,” Luke 2:7, 12, 16, also denotes “a stall,” 13:15.¶
So in the Sept., the word denoted not only a “manger” but, by metonymy, the stall or crib
(Prov. 14:4) containing the “manger.”
MANIFEST (Adjective and Verb)
A. Adjectives.
1.
(
#
)
, 1717), manifest (akin to
, “to show in, to exhibit”;
, “in,”
, “to cause to shine”), is used (a) literally in Acts 10:40,
RV
“(gave Him
to be made) manifest”; (b) metaphorically in Rom. 10:20, “(I was made) manifest.” See
OPENLY
.¶ Cf. B, No. 2.
2.
(
$
, 5318), “open to sight, visible, manifest” (the root
,
signifying “shining,” exists also in No. 1), is translated “manifest” in Luke 8:17; Acts
4:16; 7:13,
RV
(
KJV
, “known”); Rom. 1:19; 1 Cor. 3:13; 11:19; 14:25; Gal. 5:19; Phil.