γεγραμμένος

gráphō

written

To inscribe or engrave by means of marking with a tool or substance; in most contexts, to write characters, letters, or words onto a material substrate such as papyrus, parchment, or wax; by extension, to compose or author a written document. In extended uses, to record, to note down, or to determine or prescribe by writing (e.g. a decree or law). Certain figurative senses include 'to describe' or 'to make known in writing.'

G1125

John 15:25 · Word #11

Lexicon G1125

Lemmaγράφω
Transliterationgráphō
Strong'sG1125
DefinitionTo inscribe or engrave by means of marking with a tool or substance; in most contexts, to write characters, letters, or words onto a material substrate such as papyrus, parchment, or wax; by extension, to compose or author a written document. In extended uses, to record, to note down, or to determine or prescribe by writing (e.g. a decree or law). Certain figurative senses include 'to describe' or 'to make known in writing.'

Morphology V PRF PASS PTCP NOM M SG All morphology codes

Part of Speech V — Verb — An action or state of being
Tense PRF — Perfect — Completed action with ongoing results
Voice PASS — Passive — The subject receives the action
Mood PTCP — Participle — A verbal adjective
Case NOM — Nominative — The subject of the sentence
Gender M — Masculine — Grammatical masculine
Number SG — Singular — One

Common Translation

Phrasewritten
Literalhaving-been-written

Lexical Info

Lemmaγράφω
Strong'sG1125

SIBI-P1 Translation G1125-12

having been inscribed

Morphological NotesVerb, perfect tense, passive voice, participle; nominative masculine singular.
Rendering RationaleThe perfect passive participle denotes a completed act of inscribing with continuing result or state. "Having been inscribed" preserves the root sense of marking or writing and reflects the passive voice and perfect aspect.

View full lexicon entry for G1125 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

having been written

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleP1 'having been inscribed' is technically accurate but 'having been written' is more contextually suitable in biblical/law context, per common rendering and SILEX translation for writing Scripture.