ὅλου

hólos

the whole

Fully entire, complete, undivided; denoting something in its entirety or as a unified whole as opposed to partial or fragmented. In various contexts, ὅλος describes the totality or completeness of something (such as body, group, day, statement, or quantity) as a single, complete entity rather than in parts or pieces. Secondary senses may include the collective or universal (e.g., "the whole world"), or conveying 'altogether' when used adverbially.

G3650

Acts 10:22 · Word #15

Lexicon G3650

Lemmaὅλος
Transliterationhólos
Strong'sG3650
DefinitionFully entire, complete, undivided; denoting something in its entirety or as a unified whole as opposed to partial or fragmented. In various contexts, ὅλος describes the totality or completeness of something (such as body, group, day, statement, or quantity) as a single, complete entity rather than in parts or pieces. Secondary senses may include the collective or universal (e.g., "the whole world"), or conveying 'altogether' when used adverbially.

Morphology QUAN GEN N SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech QUAN — Quantifier — Indicates amount
Case GEN — Genitive — Possession, source, or separation
Gender N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

Phrasethe whole
Literalwhole

Lexical Info

Lemmaὅλος
Strong'sG3650

SIBI-P1 Translation G3650-07

of the whole

Morphological NotesAdjective functioning substantivally; genitive singular (masculine or neuter) from ὅλος; forms listed include genitive masculine singular and genitive neuter singular.
Rendering RationaleThe genitive singular form ὅλου expresses possession or relation and denotes something belonging to or characterized by totality. "Of the whole" preserves the genitive case and reflects the root sense of completeness or entirety.

View full lexicon entry for G3650 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

of the whole

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleStandardized from "the whole".