Word Summary
anthrax: coal, charcoal
Original Word: ἄνθραξTransliteration: anthrax
Phonetic Spelling: (anth'-rax)
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Short Definition: coal, charcoal
Meaning: coal, charcoal
Strong's Concordance
coal of fire.
Of uncertain derivation; a live coal -- coal of fire.
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 440: ἄνθραξἄνθραξ,
ἄνθρακος,
ὁ,
coal (also, from
Thucydides and
Aristophanes down,
ἄνθραξ πυρός a coal of fire i. e. a burning or a live coal), live coal;
Romans 12:20 ἄνθρακας πυρός σωρεύειν ἐπί τήν κεφαλήν τίνος, a proverbial expression, from
Proverbs 25:22, signifying to call up, by the favors you confer on your enemy, the memory in him of the wrong he has done you (which shall pain him as if live coals were heaped on his head), that he may the more readily repent. The Arabians call things that cause very acute mental pain
burning coals of the heart and
fire in the liver; cf. Gesenius in Rosenmüller's Biblical-exeg. Repert. i., p. 140f (or in his Thesaurus i. 280; cf. also
BB. DD. under the word
).