Word Summary
pēchys: the forearm, a cubit
Original Word: πῆχυςTransliteration: pēchys
Phonetic Spelling: (pay'-khoos)
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Short Definition: the forearm, a cubit
Meaning: the forearm, a cubit
Strong's Concordance
cubit.
Of uncertain affinity; the fore-arm, i.e. (as a measure) a cubit -- cubit.
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 4083: πῆχυςπῆχυς, genitive
πηχεως (not found in the N. T.), genitive plural
πηχῶν contracted from Ionic
πήχεων (
John 21:8;
Revelation 21:17;
1 Kings 7:3 (15), 39 (2);
Esther 7:9;
Ezekiel 40:5) according to later usage, for the earlier and Attic
πήχεων, which is common in the
Sept. (cf.
Lob. ad Phryn., p. 245f; (
WHs Appendix, p. 157);
Winer's Grammar, § 9, 2 e.),
ὁ,
the forearm i. e. that part of the arm between the hand and the elbow-joint (
Homer, Odyssey 17, 38; Iliad 21, 166, etc.); hence,
a cubit (ell, Latin
ulna), a measure of length equal to the distance from the joint of the elbow to the tip of the middle finger (i. e. about one foot and a half, but its precise length varied and is disputed; see
B. D., under the phrase, Weights and Measures, II. 1):
Matthew 6:27;
Luke 12:25 (on these passages, cf.
ἡλικία, 1 a.);
John 21:8;
Revelation 21:17. (The
Sept. very often for
אַמָּה.)