Word Summary
kerdainō: to gain
Original Word: κερδαίνωTransliteration: kerdainō
Phonetic Spelling: (ker-dah'-ee-no)
Part of Speech: Verb
Short Definition: to gain
Meaning: to gain
Strong's Concordance
gain, win.
From kerdos; to gain (literally or figuratively) -- (get) gain, win.
see GREEK kerdos
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 2770: κερδαίνωκερδαίνω: (future
κερδήσω,
James 4:13 Rec.bez elz L T Tr WH; see also below); 1 aorist
ἐκέρδησα (an Ionic form from
κερδάω, which later writers use for the earlier
ἐκερδανα, see
Lob. ad Phryn., p. 740; Alexander
Buttmann (1873) Ausf. Sprchl. ii., p. 215;
Winers Grammar, 87 (83); (
Veitch, under the word)), once 1 aorist subjunctive
κερδάνω (
1 Corinthians 9:21 L T Tr (but
WH (cf. also Griesbach note) read the future
κερδάνω, cf.
Buttmann, 60 (53); § 139, 38)); 1 future passive
κερδηθήσομαι (the subjunctive
κερδηθήσωνται,
1 Peter 3:1 R G is a clerical error (cf. references under the word
καίω, at the beginning), for which
L T Tr WH have restored
κερδηθήσονται (cf.
Buttmann, § 139, 38)); (from
Hesiod down); (from
κέρδος);
to gain, acquire; (
Vulg. passim
lucrifacio (also
lucro, etc.));
a. properly: τόν κόσμον, Matthew 16:26; Mark 8:36; Luke 9:25; money, Matthew 25:16 (L T WH),17,20,22; absolutely, to get gain, James 4:13.
b. metaphorically, α. with nouns signifying loss, damage, injury, it is used of the gain arising from shunning or escaping from the evil (where we say to spare oneself, be spared): τήν ὕβριν ταύτην καί ζημίαν, Acts 27:21; τό γέ μιανθῆναι τάς χεῖρας κερδαίνειν, to avoid the crime of fratricide, Josephus, Antiquities 2, 3, 2; ζημίαν, to escape a loss, Euripides, Cycl. 312; other examples in Kypke, Observations, ii., p. 139f β. τινα, to gain anyone i. e. to win him over to the kingdom of God, which none but the placable enter, Matthew 18:15; to gain one to faith in Christ, 1 Peter 3:1; 1 Corinthians 9:19-22; Χριστόν, to gain Christ's favor and fellowship, Philippians 3:8. Not found in the O. T.