Strong's Enhanced Concordance

The Aionian Bible un-translates and instead transliterates eleven special words to help us better understand the extent of God’s love for individuals and all mankind, and the nature of afterlife destinies. The original translation is unaltered and an inline note is appended to 64 Old Testament and 200 New Testament verses. Compare the definitions below to the Aionian Glossary. Follow the blue link below to study the word's usage. Search for any Strong's number: g1-21369 and h1-9049.
darkness
Strongs:
g4655
Greek:
σκότος
Tyndale
Word:
σκότος
Transliteration:
skotos
Gloss:
darkness
Morphhology:
Greek Noun Male/Neuter
Definition:
σκότος, -ου, ὁ the more usual cl. form (cf.σ, τό), darkness: Heb.12:18, Rec. (AS)
Liddell-Scott-Jones
Word:
σκότος
Transliteration:
skotos
Gloss:
darkness
Morphhology:
Greek Noun Male/Neuter
Definition:
σκότος, ὁ, more rarely σκότος, εος, τό (see. entry near the end), darkness, gloom, [Refs 8th c.BC+]; opposed to φάος, [Refs 5th c.BC+]; opposed to ἡμέρα, [Refs 5th c.BC+] 2) in [Refs 8th c.BC+] always of the darkness of death, mostly in phrase τὸν δὲ σ. ὄσσε κάλυψεν [Refs]; so in Trag. and Comedy texts, σκότῳ θανεῖν [Refs 5th c.BC+]; ἤδη με περιβάλλει σ. [Refs 5th c.BC+]; σκότον εἶναι τεθνηκότος (i.e. Αἰσχύλου) [Refs 5th c.BC+] 3) of the nether world, [Refs 5th c.BC+]; παῖδες ἀρχαίου Σκότου[Refs 5th c.BC+] 4) the darkness of the womb, φυγόντα μητρόθεν σκότον [Refs 4th c.BC+] 5) of blindness, σκότου νέφος [Refs 5th c.BC+]; βλέποντα νῦν μὲν ὄρθ᾽, ἔπειτα δὲ σκότον, i.e. μηδέν,[Refs 5th c.BC+] 5.b) dizziness, vertigo, [Refs 5th c.BC+]; compare σκοτόδινος, -δινιάω. 6) metaphorically, σκότῳ κρύπτειν hide in darkness, [Refs 5th c.BC+]; σκότον ἔχειν to be in darkness, obscurity, [Refs 5th c.BC+]; ἀπορία καὶ σ. [Refs 5th c.BC+] it is dark and uncertain, [Refs 5th c.BC+] 7) of a person, Μητρότιμος ὁ σ, like{ὁ σκοτεινός}, the mystery-man, [Refs 6th c.BC+]; also, darkness, i.e. ignorance, [Refs 4th c.BC+]; deceit, σ. καὶ ἀπάτη [Refs 5th c.BC+] 8) plural, σκότη shadows in a picture, [Refs 2nd c.AD+] regarded the masculine as the Attic dialect form: the neuter never occurs in [Refs 5th c.BC+], and is nowhere required by the metre in Trag, though it sometimes occurs in codices, [Refs 5th c.BC+]; it is found, however, without variant, in [Refs 5th c.BC+] and Attic dialect Prose, [Refs 5th c.BC+]; the word is always neuter in LXX and “NT.” σκοτί-α, ἡ, (σκότος) darkness, gloom, [NT+3rd c.BC+] II) in Architecture, scotia, cavetto, a sunken moulding, so called from the dark shadow it casts, [Refs 1st c.BC+] III) Σκοτιά, epithet of Aphrodite in Egypt, [Refs]
Strongs
Word:
σκότος
Transliteration:
skótos
Pronounciation:
skot'-os
Language:
Greek
Morphhology:
Noun Neuter
Definition:
shadiness, i.e. obscurity (literally or figuratively); darkness; from the base of g4639 (σκιά)