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Dict: all - ALPHA



tcr.html:



ALPHA @ fist letter of the Greek alphabet, a name applied to Christ- kjv@Revelation:1:8,11, kjv@Revelation:21:6, kjv@Revelation:22:13

smith:



ALPHA - A>@ - (A), the first letter of the Greek alphabet. With Omega, the last letter, it is used in the Old Testament and in the New to express the eternity of God, as including both the beginning and the end. kjv@Revelation:1:8 kjv@Revelation:1:11 kjv@Revelation:21:6; 22;13; kjv@Isaiah:41:4 kjv@Isaiah:44:6) hence these letters became a favorite symbol of the eternal divinity of our Lord, and were used for this purpose in connection with the cross, or the monogram of Christ (i.e. the first two letters, ch and r, of Christ’s name in Greek). Both Greeks and Hebrews employed the letters of the alphabet as numerals.

ALPHABET - A>@ - WRITING

ALPHAEUS - A>@ - (changing) the father of the apostle James the Less, kjv@Matthew:10:3; kjv@Mark:3:18; kjv@Luke:6:15; kjv@Acts:1:13) and husband of Mary. kjv@John:19:25) MARY In this latter place he is called Clopas (not, as in the Authorized Version, Cleophas).

easton:



Alphaeus @

(1.) The father of James the Less, the apostle and writer of the epistle kjv@Matthew:10:3; kjv@Mark:3:18; kjv@Luke:6:15; kjv@Acts:1:13), and the husband of Mary kjv@John:19:25). The Hebrew form of this name is Cleopas, or Clopas (q.v.).

(2.) The father of Levi, or Matthew kjv@Mark:2:14).

tcr.html2:



torrey:



tcr.1:



naves:



ALPHA @
- A title of Christ kjv@Revelation:1:8 kjv@Revelation:1:11 kjv@Revelation:21:6; kjv@Revelation:22:13
- Compare kjv@Isaiah:41:4; kjv@Isaiah:44:6; kjv@Isaiah:48:12

filter-bible-link.pl:



hitchcock:



kjv@STRING:Omega <HITCHCOCK>@ the last letter of the Greek alphabet; long O - HITCHCOCK-O


tcr:



ALPHA @ fist letter of the Greek alphabet, a name applied to Christ- kjv@Revelation:1:8,11, kjv@Revelation:21:6, kjv@Revelation:22:13

strongs:



H505 <STRHEB>@ אלף 'eleph eh'-lef Properly the same as H504; hence (an ox´ s head being the first letter of the {alphabet} and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousand: - thousand.


H1000 <STRHEB>@ בּיצה bêytsâh bay-tsaw' From the same as H948; an egg (from its whiteness): - egg. G1 <STRGRK>@ Α A al'-fah Of Hebrew origin; the first letter of the alphabet: figuratively only (from its use as a numeral) the first. Often used (usually an before a vowel) also in composition (as a contraction from G427) in the sense of privation; so in many words beginning with this letter; occasionally in the sense of union (as a contraction of G260): - Alpha.


G2503 <STRGRK>@ ἰῶτα iōta ee-o'-tah Of Hebrew origin (the tenth letter of the Hebrew alphabet); iota the name of the eighth letter of the Greek alphabet put (figuratively) for a very small part of anything: - jot.


G256 <STRGRK>@ Ἀλφαῖος Alphaios al-fah'-yos Of Hebrew origin (compare [H2501]); Alpheus an Israelite: - Alpheus.


G5516 <STRGRK>@ χξς chi xi stigma khee xee stig'-ma The 22nd 14th and an obsolete letter (G4742 as a cross) of the Greek alphabet (intermediate between the 5th and 6th) used as numbers; denoting respectively 600 60 and 6; 666 as a numeral: - six hundred threescore and six.


G5598 <STRGRK>@ Ω Ō o'-meg-ah The last letter of the Greek alphabet that is (figuratively) the finality: - Omega.