Word Summary
sykophanteō: to accuse falsely
Original Word: συκοφαντέωTransliteration: sykophanteō
Phonetic Spelling: (soo-kof-an-teh'-o)
Part of Speech: Verb
Short Definition: to accuse falsely
Meaning: to accuse falsely
Strong's Concordance
accuse falsely, take by false accusation.
From a compound of sukon and a derivative of phaino; to be a fig-informer (reporter of the law forbidding the exportation of figs from Greece), "sycophant", i.e. (genitive and by extension) to defraud (exact unlawfully, extort) -- accuse falsely, take by false accusation.
see GREEK sukon
see GREEK phaino
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 4811: συκοφαντέωσυκοφαντέω,
συκοφάντω; 1 aorist
ἐσυκοφάντησα; (from
συκοφάντης, and this from
σῦκον 'fig', and
φαίνω 'to show'. At Athens those were called
συκοφανται whose business it was to inform against anyone whom they might detect exporting figs out of Attica; and as sometimes they seem to have extorted money from those loath to he exposed, the name
συκοφάντης from the time of
Aristophanes down was a general term of opprobrium to designate
a malignant informer, a calumniator; a malignant and base accuser from love of gain (but cf. Liddell and Scott, under the word); hence, the verb
συκοφάντω signifies)
1. to accuse wrongfully, to calumniate, to attack by malicious devices (Aristophanes, Xenophon, Plato, others).
2. to exact money wrongfully; to extort from, defraud: Luke 3:14 (here R. V. margin accuse wrongfully); with a genitive of the person and accusative of the thing, Luke 19:8 (τριάκοντα μνᾶς παρά τίνος Lysias, p. 177, 32. The Sept. for עָשַׁק, to oppress, defraud, Job 35:9; Ecclesiastes 4:1; Psalm 118:122 (); πένητα, Proverbs 14:31; Proverbs 22:16; πτωχούς, Proverbs 28:3).