σῇ

sós

your

Second-person singular possessive adjective, meaning 'your' or 'yours', used to indicate possession or relationship pertaining to the person addressed. Functions as an attributive possessive (e.g., 'your house'), predicative possessive (e.g., 'it is yours'), or substantivally (e.g., 'that which is yours'). Emphasizes personal or intimate possession, often with a tone of familiarity or affection, sometimes distinguished from the more general possessive σου.

G4674

Acts 5:4 · Word #9

Lexicon G4674

Lemmaσός
Transliterationsós
Strong'sG4674
DefinitionSecond-person singular possessive adjective, meaning 'your' or 'yours', used to indicate possession or relationship pertaining to the person addressed. Functions as an attributive possessive (e.g., 'your house'), predicative possessive (e.g., 'it is yours'), or substantivally (e.g., 'that which is yours'). Emphasizes personal or intimate possession, often with a tone of familiarity or affection, sometimes distinguished from the more general possessive σου.

Morphology DET.P 2P DAT F SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech DET.P — Possessive Determiner — Shows possession
Person 2P — 2nd person — The one spoken to ("you")
Case DAT — Dative — Indirect object, means, or location
Gender F — Feminine — Grammatical feminine
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

Phraseyour
Literalyour

Lexical Info

Lemmaσός
Strong'sG4674

SIBI-P1 Translation G4674-02

you (singular)

Morphological NotesPersonal pronoun, second person, singular, accusative case (direct object form).
Rendering RationaleThe form σε is the accusative singular of the second person pronoun, marking the direct object as the one being addressed. "You (singular)" preserves both the root sense of direct address and the singular number inherent in the morphology.

View full lexicon entry for G4674 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

your

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleP1 rendered as 'you (singular)' but this is a possessive adjective and should be 'your' to match the Greek and context.