Word Summary
dynō: to enter, to sink into
Original Word: δύνωTransliteration: dynō
Phonetic Spelling: (doo'-no)
Part of Speech: Verb
Short Definition: to enter, to sink into
Meaning: to enter, to sink into
Strong's Concordance
to enter, to set
Or dumi doo'-mee prolonged forms of an obsolete primary duo doo'-o (to sink) to go "down" -- set.
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 1416: δύνωδύνω,
δύω; 2 aorist
ἔδυν; 1 aorist (in Greek writings transitively)
ἐδυσα (
Mark 1:32 L Tr WH), cf. Alexander
Buttmann (1873) Ausf. Spr. ii., p. 156f;
Winers Grammar, p. 84 (81);
Buttmann, 56 (49); (
Veitch, see under the words);
to go into, enter; go under, be plunged into, sink in: in the N. T. twice of the setting sun (sinking as it were into the sea),
Mark 1:32;
Luke 4:40. So times without number in Greek writings from
Homer on; the
Sept.,
Genesis 28:11;
Leviticus 22:7, etc.; Tobit 2:4; 1 Macc. 10:50. (Compare:
ἐκδύνω,
ἀπεκδύνω (
ἀπεκδύνομαι),
ἐνδύνω,
ἐπενδύνω,
παρεισδύνω,
ἐπιδύνω.)
STRONGS NT 1416: δύσις [δύσις, δύσεως, ἡ;
1. a sinking or setting, especially of the heavenly bodies;
2. of the quarter in which the sun sets, the west: Mark 16 WH (rejected) 'Shorter Conclusion.' (So both in singular and in plural: Aristotle, de mund. 3, p. 393{a}, 17; 4, p. 394^b, 21; Polybius 1, 42, 5 etc.)] STRONGS NT 1416: δύωδύω, see δύνω.