Word Summary
oregō: to stretch out, to reach after, to yearn for
Original Word: ὀρέγωTransliteration: oregō
Phonetic Spelling: (or-eg'-om-ahee)
Part of Speech: Verb
Short Definition: to stretch out, to reach after, to yearn for
Meaning: to stretch out, to reach after, to yearn for
Strong's Concordance
covet after, desire.
Middle voice of apparently a prolonged form of an obsolete primary (compare oros); to stretch oneself, i.e. Reach out after (long for) -- covet after, desire.
see GREEK oros
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 3713: ὀρέγωὀρέγω: (cf. Latin
rego, German
recken,
strecken,
reichen (English
reach;
Curtius, § 153)); from
Homer down;
to stretch forth, as
χεῖρα,
Homer, Iliad 15, 371, etc.; present middle (cf.
Winers Grammar, p. 252 (237) note),
to stretch oneself out in order to touch or to grasp something, to reach after or desire something: with a genitive of the thing,
1 Timothy 3:1;
Hebrews 11:16;
φιλαργυριας, to give oneself up to the love of money (not quite accurately since
φιλαργυριας is itself the
ὄρεξις; (cf. Ellicott at the passage)),
1 Timothy 6:10.