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  1. Original Word: θεός, οῦ, ὁ. Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine; Noun, Masculine. Transliteration: theos. Phonetic Spelling: (theh'-os) Definition: God, a god. Usage: (a) God, (b) a god, generally. HELPS Word-studies. 2316 theós (of unknown origin) – properly, God, the Creator and owner of all things (Jn 1:3; Gen 1 - 3).

    • Theos

      Englishman's Concordance. θεός (theos) — 311 Occurrences....

  2. Transliteration: onoma. Phonetic Spelling: (on'-om-ah) Definition: a name, authority, cause. Usage: name, character, fame, reputation. HELPS Word-studies. 3686 ónoma – name; (figuratively) the manifestation or revelation of someone's character, i.e. as distinguishing them from all others.

    • EL. Translated God. (mighty, strong, prominent) used 250 times in the Old Testament; Genesis 7.1 The Lord said to Noah, “Come into the ark, you and all your household, for I consider you godly among this generation.
    • ELOHIM. Translated God (a plural noun, more than two, used with singular verbs, the dual form Eloah is used in Job); Elohim occurs 2,570 times in the OT, 32 times in Gen.
    • EL SHADDAI. Translated God Almighty or “God All Sufficient.” 48 times in the OT, 31 times in Job. The Septuagint uses Greek “ikanos” meaning “all-sufficient” or “self-sufficient.”
    • ADONAI. Translated Lord in our English Bibles (Capitol letter ‘L ‘, lower case, ‘ord’) (Adonai is plural, the sing. is “adon”). “Master” or “Lord” 300 times in the OT always plural when referring to God, when sing.
  3. Theos Is the common word denoting a god, especially one of the great gods (see olympian gods). Although often referring to an individual deity in his anthropomorphic representation, the term is rarely used to address a god: no vocative exists.

  4. May 28, 2024 · Charlotte and its masculine equivalent, Charles, are derived from the Old English word ceorl, meaning “free man.” The word was used to distinguish a free person from a bondsman or enslaved ...

  5. Jan 4, 2022 · Answer. Each of the many names of God describes a different aspect of His many-faceted character. Here are some of the better-known names of God in the Bible: EL, ELOAH [el, el-oh-ah]: God "mighty, strong, prominent" ( Nehemiah 9:17; Psalm 139:19) – etymologically, El appears to mean “power” and “might” ( Genesis 31:29 ).

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  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › God_(word)God (word) - Wikipedia

    The word god was used to represent Greek theos and Latin deus in Bible translations, first in the Gothic translation of the New Testament by Ulfilas. For the etymology of deus, see *dyēus . Greek " θεός " ( theos) means god in English.

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