Page 985 - Vines Expositary Dictionary

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HUMILIATION
(
&
, 5014), akin to
(see above), is rendered “low estate”
in Luke 1:48; “humiliation,” Acts 8:33; Phil. 3:21,
RV
“(the body of our) humiliation,”
KJV
, “(our) vile (body)”; Jas. 1:10, where “in that he is made low,” is, lit., “in his
humiliation.” See
ESTATE
,
LOW
HUNDRED, HUNDREDFOLD
1.
(
=
, 1540), an indeclinable numeral, denotes “a hundred,” e.g., Matt.
18:12, 28; it also signifies “a hundredfold,” Matt. 13:8, 23, and the
RV
in the
corresponding passage, Mark 4:8, 20 (for
KJV
, “hundred”), signifying the complete
productiveness of sown seed. In the passage in Mark the phrase is, lit., “in thirty and in
sixty and in a hundred.” In Mark 6:40 it is used with the preposition
, in the phrase
“by hundreds.” It is followed by other numerals in John 21:11; Acts 1:15; Rev. 7:4; 14:1,
3; 21:17.
2.
(
=
&
, 1542), an adjective, denotes “a
hundredfold,” Mark 10:30; Luke 8:8; the best mss. have it in Matt. 19:29 for
, “many times more.” See the
RV
margin.¶
For multiples of a hundred, see under the numerals
TWO
,
THREE
, etc. For “a hundred
years,” see
YEARS
.
HUNGER (Noun and Verb), HUNGERED, HUNGRY
A. Noun.
(
, 3042) has the meanings “famine” and “hunger”; “hunger” in Luke
15:17; 2 Cor. 11:27; in Rev. 6:8,
RV
“famine” (
KJV
, “hunger”). See
FAMINE
.
B. Verb.
(
1
, 3983), “to hunger, be hungry, hungered,” is used (a) literally, e.g.,
Matt. 4:2; 12:1; 21:18; Rom. 12:20; 1 Cor. 11:21, 34; Phil. 4:12; Rev. 7:16; Christ
identifies Himself with His saints in speaking of Himself as suffering in their sufferings
in this and other respects, Matt. 25:35, 42; (b) metaphorically, Matt. 5:6; Luke 6:21, 25;
John 6:35.
C. Adjective.
(
$
, 4361) signifies “hungry” (
, “intensive,”
,
“hunger”), Acts 10:10,
KJV
, “very hungry,”
RV
, “hungry.”¶
HURT (Noun and Verb), HURTFUL
A. Noun.
$
(
> $
, 5196) is rendered “hurt” in Acts 27:10,
KJV
only. See
HARM
.
B. Verbs.
1.
(
!
, 91) signifies, intransitively, “to do wrong, do hurt, act unjustly”
( , negative, and
, “justice”), transitively, “to wrong, hurt or injure a person.” It is
translated “to hurt” in the following: (a), intransitively, Rev. 9:19; (b) transitively, Luke
¶ Indicates that all the NT occurrences of the Greek word under consideration are
mentioned under the heading or sub-heading.