Ancient Greek-English Dictionary Language

λόγος

Second declension Noun; Masculine 기독교 Transliteration:

Principal Part: λόγος λόγου

Structure: λογ (Stem) + ος (Ending)

Etym.: le/gw

Sense

  1. That which is said: word, sentence, speech, story, debate, utterance.
  2. That which is thought: reason, consideration, computation, reckoning.
  3. An account, explanation, or narrative.
  4. Subject matter.
  5. (Christianity) The word or wisdom of God, identified with Jesus in the New Testament.

Declension

Second declension

The inflection forms above were generated by rules and some usages of them were not attested.

Due to a bug of system, some forms may display wrong accents.

Examples

  • καίτοι δυοῖν γε πάντεσ ἄνθρωποι λόγοιν τὸν κρείσσον’ ἴσμεν, καὶ τὰ χρηστὰ καὶ κακά, ὅσῳ τε πολέμου κρεῖσσον εἰρήνη βροτοῖσ· (Euripides, Suppliants, episode 3:11)
  • τούτοιν τὸν ἕτερον τοῖν λόγοιν, τὸν ἥττονα, νικᾶν λέγοντά φασι τἀδικώτερα. (Aristophanes, Clouds, Prologue 4:23)
  • ἀλλά με δίδαξον τὸν ἕτερον τοῖν σοῖν λόγοιν, τὸν μηδὲν ἀποδιδόντα. (Aristophanes, Clouds, Prologue 7:18)
  • αὐτὸσ μαθήσεται παρ’ αὐτοῖν τοῖν λόγοιν. (Aristophanes, Clouds, Lyric-Scene, iambics 1:26)
  • ἑλοῦ δ’ ὁπότερον τοῖν λόγοιν βούλει λέγειν. (Aristophanes, Clouds, Episode19)

Synonyms

  1. Subject matter

Related

Source: Ancient Greek entries from Wiktionary

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