ΤΑΥΤΑΣΚΑΙΣΑΡ, ταυτασκαισαρ
TAUTASKAISAR, tautaskaisar
Sounds Like: TAW-tas KAI-sar
Translations: these Caesar, these things Caesar
From the root: ΟΥ̓͂ΤΟΣ, ΚΑΙ͂ΣΑΡ
Part of Speech: Demonstrative Pronoun, Proper Noun
Explanation: This appears to be a compound or concatenated word formed by the demonstrative pronoun "ΤΑΥΤΑΣ" (tautas) and the proper noun "ΚΑΙΣΑΡ" (Kaisar). "ΤΑΥΤΑΣ" means "these" or "these things" and is in the feminine accusative plural form. "ΚΑΙΣΑΡ" is the name "Caesar". Therefore, the combined form would mean "these Caesar" or "these things Caesar", likely referring to actions or attributes associated with Caesar.
Inflection: ΤΑΥΤΑΣ: Feminine, Accusative, Plural; ΚΑΙΣΑΡ: Masculine, Nominative, Singular
Strong’s numbers: G3778 (Lookup on BibleHub), G2541 (Lookup on BibleHub)
Unknown: Yes
Instances
Josephus' The Jewish War
- Book One — 11:6
From the same root
No other words from the same root, ΟΥ̓͂ΤΟΣ, ΚΑΙ͂ΣΑΡ, appear in our texts.
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