ΕἸΠΕ, εἰπε
EIPE, eipe
Sounds Like: EYE-peh
Translations: said, spoke, told
From the root: ΕἸΠΟΝ
Part of Speech: Verb
Explanation: This word is an aorist active indicative form of the verb 'εἶπον' (eîpon), which serves as the aorist of 'λέγω' (legō). It means 'he/she/it said' or 'he/she/it spoke'. It is used to report a completed action of speaking in the past.
Inflection: Third Person, Singular, Aorist, Active, Indicative
Strong’s number: G2036 (Lookup on BibleHub)
Instances
1 Enoch Greek Collection
Aristeas
- Aristeas’ Letter to Philocrates — 1:11, 1:20, 1:53, 1:181, 1:184, 1:195, 1:201, 1:208, 1:210, 1:211, 1:213, 1:217, 1:224, 1:226, 1:230, 1:232, 1:234, 1:236, 1:238, 1:239, 1:240, 1:241, 1:243, 1:244, 1:253, 1:260, 1:267, 1:269, 1:270, 1:271, 1:280, 1:281, 1:286, 1:291, 1:293, 1:312, 1:318
Clement of Alexandria
Josephus' Antiquities of the Jews
- Book 1 — 0:26, 1:29
- Book 2 — 9:235, 15:330
- Book 3 — 13:298
- Book 4 — 8:306
- Book 5 — 5:203, 9:323
- Book 6 — 7:146, 8:159, 9:181, 10:200, 11:217, 11:230, 12:244, 12:255, 13:284, 13:298, 13:299, 14:355
- Book 7 — 4:91, 9:212, 10:248, 10:251, 11:271, 13:327, 13:331
- Book 8 — 1:10, 9:231, 10:257, 13:345, 14:374, 14:392
- Book 9 — 4:73, 6:110, 6:122, 7:145
- Book 10 — 8:141
- Book 11 — 1:5
- Book 18 — 6:175
- Book 19 — 7:333
- Book 20 — 2:27
Justin Martyr
- First Apology of Justin Martyr — 53:1, 60:1
- Dialogue with Trypho the Jew — 1:6, 13:1, 13:8, 28:5, 35:3, 39:3, 44:3, 45:2, 46:6, 56:2, 56:7, 56:8, 56:17, 56:18, 56:20, 58:4, 58:7, 60:4, 62:1, 62:5, 71:4, 73:5, 75:1, 77:3, 79:1, 80:1, 82:2, 85:9, 87:2, 102:4, 105:5, 115:2, 122:1, 126:2, 126:6, 136:2, 139:2
Pseudo-Baruch
Swete's Recension of the Greek Septuagint
- 1 Kings — 12:24
- Ezra (Alpha) — 4:8
- Jeremiah — 19:14, 36:25
- Daniel (Old Greek) — 2:5, 2:14, 2:26, 6:16, 8:19, 10:11, 14:5, 14:9
- Enoch — 12:4, 15:2
The Shepherd of Hermas — Visions
- Vision 4 — 2:5
Tischendorf's Greek New Testament
From the same root
Below are all other words in our texts that we've cataloged as being from the same root, ΕἸΠΟΝ.
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.
- ἘΠΩΜΕΝ — we may say, let us say, we should say
- ΕἸΠΑΙΣΑΝ — they said, they spoke
- ΕἸΠΟΝΟΤΟΣ — of having said, of one who said, of one who spoke, of having spoken
- ΕἸΠΟΣΑΝ — they said, they spoke
- ΕἸΠΟΥΣΙΝ — they said, they spoke
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