πονηρὰ
ponērós
evil
Characterized by active harmfulness or wickedness; causing trouble, pain, or suffering; morally depraved or malignant in intent or effect. In various contexts, can describe people, actions, conditions, or even spiritual beings as spirit or agent of moral evil.
John 3:19 · Word #26
Lexicon G4190
| Lemma | πονηρός |
| Transliteration | ponērós |
| Strong's | G4190 |
| Definition | Characterized by active harmfulness or wickedness; causing trouble, pain, or suffering; morally depraved or malignant in intent or effect. In various contexts, can describe people, actions, conditions, or even spiritual beings as spirit or agent of moral evil. |
Morphology ADJ.P NOM N PL
All morphology codes
| Part of Speech | ADJ.P — Predicate Adjective — Linked to the subject by a verb |
| Case | NOM — Nominative — The subject of the sentence |
| Gender | N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter |
| Number | PL — Plural — More than one |
Common Translation
| Phrase | evil |
| Literal | evil |
Lexical Info
| Lemma | πονηρός |
| Strong's | G4190 |
SIBI-P1 Translation G4190-01
harmful evils
| Morphological Notes | Adjective functioning substantively; accusative neuter plural form. |
| Rendering Rationale | The adjective denotes active harmfulness or malignant wickedness derived from πόνος (toil, pain). As neuter accusative plural used substantivally, it refers to "harmful evils" or "malignant things" as objects. |
View full lexicon entry for G4190 →
SILEX v2
SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)
harmful evils
| Same as P1 | Yes |
| Rationale | P1 'harmful evils' brings out both the active and moral sense of ponera in the SILEX definition; no change required. |