Search for: STORMS

4041 Strong's Hebrew Dictionary (KJV), p. CA`AR.2 (James Strong)

or (feminine) ctarah {seh-aw-raw'}; from 'ca`ar' ( ca`ar ); a hurricane:--storm(-y), tempest, whirlwind.

4042 Strong's Hebrew Dictionary (KJV), p. SHOW.2 (James Strong)

or (feminine) showtah {sho-aw'}; or shoah {sho-aw'}; from an unused root meaning to rush over; a tempest; by implication, devastation:--desolate(-ion), destroy, destruction, storm, wasteness.

4043 Strong's Hebrew Dictionary (KJV), p. SA`AR.2 (James Strong)

a primitive root; to storm; by implication, to shiver, i.e. fear:--be (horribly) afraid, fear, hurl as a storm, be tempestuous, come like (take away as with) a whirlwind.

4044 Strong's Hebrew Dictionary (KJV), p. SA`AR.2 (James Strong)

from 'sa`ar' ( sa`ar ); a tempest; also a terror:--affrighted, X horribly, X sore, storm. See 'se`ar' ( se`ar ).

4045 Strong's Hebrew Dictionary (KJV), p. S`ARAH.2 (James Strong)

feminine of 'sa`ar' ( sa`ar ); a hurricane:--storm, tempest.

4046 Strong's Hebrew Dictionary (KJV), p. SH`ARYAH.2 (James Strong)

from 'sha`ar' ( sha`ar ) and 'Yahh' ( Yahh ); Jah has stormed; Shearjah, an Israelite:--Sheariah.

4047 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. GNOPHOS.2 (James Strong)

akin to νεφος - nephos νεφος; gloom (as of a storm):--blackness.

4048 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. EUROKLUDON.2 (James Strong)

from Euros (the east wind) and κλψδων - kludon κλψδων; a storm from the East (or southeast), i.e. (in modern phrase) a Levanter:--Euroklydon.

4049 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. THUELLA.2 (James Strong)

from θψω - thuo θψω (in the sense of blowing) a storm:--tempest.

4050 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. LAILAPS.2 (James Strong)

of uncertain derivation; a whirlwind (squall):--storm, tempest.

4051 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. OMBROS.2 (James Strong)

of uncertain affinity; a thunder storm:--shower.

4052 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. PROSPIPTO.2 (James Strong)

from προς - pros προς and πιπτω - pipto πιπτω; to fall towards, i.e. (gently) prostrate oneself (in supplication or homage), or (violently) to rush upon (in storm):--beat upon, fall (down) at (before).

4053 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. CHEIMAZO.2 (James Strong)

from the same as χειμων - cheimon χειμων; to storm, i.e. (passively) to labor under a gale:--be tossed with tempest.

4054 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. CHEIMARRHOS.2 (James Strong)

from the base of χειμων - cheimon χειμων and ρεω - rheo ρεω; a storm-runlet, i.e. winter-torrent:--brook.

4055 Strong's Greek Dictionary (KJV), p. CHEIMON.2 (James Strong)

from a derivative of cheo (to pour; akin to the base of χασμα - chasma χασμα through the idea of a channel), meaning a storm (as pouring rain); by implication, the rainy season, i.e. winter:--tempest, foul weather, winter.

4056 Thayer's Greek Lexicon, p. αἵρεσις.3

1. (from αἱρέω ), act of taking, capture : τῆς πόλεως, the storming of a city; in secular authors.

4057 Thayer's Greek Lexicon, p. ἀποφορτίζομαι.3

(Elsewhere also used of sailors lightening ship during a storm in order to avoid shipwreck: Philo de praem. et poen. § 5 κυβερνήτης, χειμώνων ἐπιγινομένων, ἀποφορτίζεται; Athen. 2, 5, p. 37 and following, where it occurs twice.)

4058 Thayer's Greek Lexicon, p. βιάζω.2

… by storm, i. e. a share in the heavenly kingdom is sought for with the most ardent zeal and the intensest exertion; cf. Xenophon, Hell. 5, 2, 15 (23) πόλεις τὰς βεβιασμένας …

4059 Thayer's Greek Lexicon, p. ἐκβολή.4

… a storm to keep her from sinking, (Aeschylus sept. 769; Aristotle, eth. Nic. 3, 1, 5 [p. 1110 a, 9]; Lucian, de merc. cond. 1): ποιεῖσθαι ἐκβολήν, Latin jacturam facere, to throw …

4060 Thayer's Greek Lexicon, p. θύελλα.2

… sudden storm, tempest, whirlwind : Hebrews 12:18. ( Deuteronomy 4:11; Deuteronomy 5:22; Homer, Hesiod, Tragg., others) [Cf. Schmidt, chapter 55, 11; Trench § 73 at the end.]