ΔΗΜΟΤΩΝ, δημοτων
DĒMOTŌN, dēmotōn
Sounds Like: day-MOH-tohn
Translations: of the citizens, of the common people, of the townsmen
From the root: ΔΗΜΟΤΗΣ
Part of Speech: Noun
Explanation: This word refers to citizens, townsmen, or members of the common people. It is used to describe individuals who belong to a particular city or community, often distinguishing them from rulers or foreigners. In the provided context, it refers to a group of people from the town.
Inflection: Genitive, Plural, Masculine
Strong’s number: G1218 (Lookup on BibleHub)
Instances
Josephus' The Jewish War
From the same root
Below are all other words in our texts that we've cataloged as being from the same root, ΔΗΜΟΤΗΣ.
These could represent different words with related meanings, or different forms of the same word to fit different grammatical cases, numbers, or genders. This list may include spelling variants and even misspellings in the original manuscripts! Even more words from the same root may exist in other ancient texts that aren't in our database.
- ΔΗΜΟΤ — citizen, a citizen, commoner, a commoner, townsman, a townsman
- ΔΗΜΟΤΑΙ — fellow citizens, countrymen, townsmen, people of the same district
- ΔΗΜΟΤΑΙΣ — (to) fellow citizens, (to) countrymen, (to) townsmen, (to) common people
- ΔΗΜΟΤΑΣ — citizen, a citizen, townsman, a townsman, commoner, a commoner
- ΔΗΜΟΤΗΣ — citizen, a citizen, commoner, a commoner
- ΔΗΜΟΤΙΝ — a common person, a commoner, a citizen, a native
- ΔΗΜΟΤΙΣ — a citizen, a native, a common person, a commoner
This concordance database is in beta
That means it's an unfinished preview of what we're building and is still being refined and corrected. It was initially generated from Google Gemini 2.5. It will be edited and corrected over time, with additional information added as we go.
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