μηδένα
mēdeís
no one
Negative pronoun meaning 'no one, nothing, not even one.' Used to indicate total absence or exclusion of persons or things, with emphasis on not a single instance or amount. Frequently functions as a substantive (without a noun), adjectival (modifying a noun), or adverbial in negating both animate and inanimate referents. Commonly appears in negative clauses and questions, or following certain particles and verbs of prohibition or denial, to reinforce absolute exclusion.
Acts 9:7 · Word #13
Lexicon G3367
| Lemma | μηδείς |
| Transliteration | mēdeís |
| Strong's | G3367 |
| Definition | Negative pronoun meaning 'no one, nothing, not even one.' Used to indicate total absence or exclusion of persons or things, with emphasis on not a single instance or amount. Frequently functions as a substantive (without a noun), adjectival (modifying a noun), or adverbial in negating both animate and inanimate referents. Commonly appears in negative clauses and questions, or following certain particles and verbs of prohibition or denial, to reinforce absolute exclusion. |
Morphology PRO.I ACC M SG
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | PRO.I — Indefinite Pronoun — Refers to something unspecified |
| Case | ACC — Accusative — Direct object or extent |
| Gender | M — Masculine — Grammatical masculine |
| Number | SG — Singular — One |
Common Translation
| Phrase | no one |
| Literal | no-one |
Lexical Info
| Lemma | μηδείς |
| Strong's | G3367 |
SIBI-P1 Translation G3367-04
no one
| Morphological Notes | Indefinite negative pronoun; accusative, masculine, singular; substantive use indicating total absence of any person. |
| Rendering Rationale | The term denotes absolute exclusion—‘not even one.’ As accusative masculine singular, it functions substantivally to refer to not a single person as the object of an action; English ‘no one’ naturally serves for both subject and object positions. |
View full lexicon entry for G3367 →
SILEX v2
SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)
no one
| Same as P1 | Yes |
| Rationale | P1 is already accurate for the negative pronoun in this context. |