ΔΑΚΤΥΛΩΝΑΥ̓ΤΟΥ, δακτυλωναὐτου
DAKTYLŌNAUTOU, daktylōnautou
Sounds Like: DAK-too-LON ow-TOO
Translations: of fingers, his, of him, its, of it
From the root: ΔΑΚΤΥΛΟΣ, ΑΥ̓ΤΟΣ
Part of Speech: Noun, Pronoun
Explanation: This is not a single word, but a concatenation of two separate Koine Greek words: ΔΑΚΤΥΛΩΝ (daktylon) and ΑΥ̓ΤΟΥ (autou). ΔΑΚΤΥΛΩΝ is the genitive plural form of the noun ΔΑΚΤΥΛΟΣ, meaning 'finger'. ΑΥ̓ΤΟΥ is the genitive singular form of the pronoun ΑΥ̓ΤΟΣ, meaning 'he, she, it, himself, herself, itself', and in the genitive case, it translates to 'his' or 'its'. Therefore, the combined phrase means 'of his fingers' or 'of its fingers'. This type of concatenation without spaces is common in ancient manuscripts.
Inflection: ΔΑΚΤΥΛΩΝ: Plural, Genitive, Masculine; ΑΥ̓ΤΟΥ: Singular, Genitive, Masculine or Neuter
Strong’s numbers: G1147 (Lookup on BibleHub), G0846 (Lookup on BibleHub)
Instances
Clement of Alexandria
- Exhortation to the Greeks (Protrepticus) — 4:86
From the same root
No other words from the same root, ΔΑΚΤΥΛΟΣ, ΑΥ̓ΤΟΣ, appear in our texts.
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