Notes:
(1) This is often a translation of various inflections of a Greek verb. When it
represents a separate word, it is always emphatic, and is a translation of one or other of
the verbs mentioned under WILL. (2)
>
(the 2nd aorist tense of
, “to owe”)
expresses a wish, “I would that,” either impracticable, 1 Cor. 4:8,
RV
(
KJV
, “would to
God”); or possible, 2 Cor. 11:1; Gal. 5:12; Rev. 3:15. (3)
,$
, “to pray,” with the
particle , expressing a strong desire with a remote possibility of fulfillment, is used in
Acts 26:29, “I would (to God, that).”
WOUND (Noun and Verb)
A. Noun.
$
(
$
, 5134), “a wound,” occurs in Luke 10:34.¶
: &
8
, “a blow, a stroke,” is used in Luke 10:30 with
“to lay on,” lit.,
“laid on blows,”
RV
, “beat” (
KJV
, “wounded”). In Rev. 13:3, 12,
is used with the
genitive case of
, “death,” lit., “stroke of death,”
RV
, “death stroke” (
KJV
,
“deadly wound”); the rendering “wound” does not accurately give the meaning; in v. 14,
with the genitive of
, “a sword,”
KJV
, “wound” (
RV
, “stroke”).
B. Verb.
$
(
$
&
, 5135), “to wound” (from A), occurs in Luke 20:12 and Acts
19:16.¶
Note:
In Rev. 13:3,
KJV
,
, “to slay,” is translated “wounded,”
RV
, “smitten”
(
KJV
and
RV
marg., “slain”).
For
WOUND
(wrapped) see
WIND
(Verb)
WOVEN
$
(
%
, 5307), from
$
, “to weave” (found in good mss. in Luke
12:27), is used of Christ’s garment, John 19:23.¶
WRANGLINGS
(
$ $ )
, 3859v), found in 1 Tim. 6:5, denotes “constant strife,”
“obstinate contests” (Ellicott), “mutual irritations” (Field),
KJV
, “perverse disputings”
(marg., “gallings one of another”),
RV
“wranglings.” Some texts have
. The
preposition
- is used intensively, indicating thoroughness, completeness.¶ The simple
word
(not found in the NT), denotes “hostility, enmity.” See
DISPUTE
, No. 3.
WRAP
1.
(
#
!
, 1750), “to roll in, wind in,” occurs in Mark 15:46; see
WIND
(Verb), No. 3.¶
2.
$
(
#
&
, 1794), “to roll in,” occurs in Matt. 27:59; Luke 23:53; John
20:7: see
ROLL
, No. 5.¶
v Variant spellings of forms of other words not listed in
Strong’s
are indicated with a “v”
following the number (for instance,
, a variant of
, is 1790v).