βαρέα

barýs

grievous

Having weight or mass; heavy. In extended or figurative contexts: burdensome, severe, oppressive, serious, grave, important. The primary sense involves physical heaviness, but the term is frequently applied metaphorically to indicate something that is difficult to bear, emotionally intense, or possessing serious consequence or significance.

G926

Acts 25:7 · Word #13

Lexicon G926

Lemmaβαρύς
Transliterationbarýs
Strong'sG926
DefinitionHaving weight or mass; heavy. In extended or figurative contexts: burdensome, severe, oppressive, serious, grave, important. The primary sense involves physical heaviness, but the term is frequently applied metaphorically to indicate something that is difficult to bear, emotionally intense, or possessing serious consequence or significance.

Morphology ADJ.A ACC N PL All morphology codes

Part of Speech ADJ.A — Attributive Adjective — Describes a noun directly
Case ACC — Accusative — Direct object or extent
Gender N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter
Number PL — Plural — More than one

Common Translation

Phrasegrievous
Literalheavy-grievous

Lexical Info

Lemmaβαρύς
Strong'sG926

SIBI-P1 Translation G926-01

heavy things

Morphological NotesAdjective, accusative neuter plural (AA, ANP); agrees with or substantivally represents neuter plural objects in the accusative case.
Rendering RationaleThe adjective βαρύς fundamentally denotes weight or heaviness, extended metaphorically to burdensomeness or severity. As accusative neuter plural, it modifies or stands for neuter plural objects, hence rendered concisely as "heavy things" to preserve both root sense and morphology.

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SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)