snake
Morphhology:
Greek, Noun, Male
Definition:
ὄφις, -εως, ὁ [in LXX chiefly for נָחָשׁ;] a serpent, snake: Mat.7:10 Mrk.16:18, Luk.10:19 11:11, Jhn.3:14, 1Co.10:9, Rev.9:19; as typical of wisdom and cunning, Mat.10:16 23:23, 2Co.11:3 (cf. Gen.31:1-55); of Satan (cf. Gen.3:1, Wis.2:23-24, 4Ma.18:8), Rev.12:9, 14 12:11 20:2. (AS)
Morphhology:
Greek, Noun, Male
Definition:
ὄφις, ὁ,
genitive ὄφεως,
poetry also ὄφεος [
Refs 5th c.BC+];
Doric dialect and
Ionic dialect ὄφιος [
Refs 8th c.BC+]:—
serpent, αἰόλος [
Refs 8th c.BC+]; ὁ ψυχρὸς ὄ. [
Refs 3rd c.BC+]; equivalent to δράκων in [
Refs 8th c.BC+]
II) like{δράκων},
a serpent-like bracelet, [
Refs 4th c.BC+]; ὄφεις is
Attic dialect for ψέλλια
accusative to [
Refs 2nd c.AD+]
II.2) τρικάρηνος ὄ. ὁ χάλκεος dedicated at Delphi (= [
Refs 5th c.BC+]
III) the constellation [
Refs 4th c.BC+]
IV)
a creeping plant, [
Refs 5th c.BC+]
V) a kind of
fish, see at {ὀφίδιον} [
Refs]
VI)
guinea-worm (elsewhere δρακόντιον), [
Refs 2nd c.AD+]
VII) ={ὀφίασις} I, [
Refs 1st c.AD+]. [The first syllable is sometimes made long in the older Poets, αἰόλον ὄφιν [
Refs 8th c.BC+] —The
ultima of the _nominative_ and _accusative_ ὄφις, ὄφιν is commonly long, as in [
Refs 8th c.BC+]; short only in later Poets, as [
Refs 4th c.BC+]
Morphhology:
Noun Masculine
Definition:
a snake, figuratively, (as a type of sly cunning) an artful malicious person, especially Satan; serpent; probably from
g3700 (ὀπτάνομαι) (through the idea of sharpness of vision);