ἰδίων

ídios

own

Pertaining to oneself or one's own; belonging to or associated with a specific person, entity, or group. The term fundamentally denotes possession or close association and may describe what is proper, characteristic, peculiar, or exclusive to the subject. In a broader sense, it is used to distinguish what is private, particular, or distinct from what is general, common, or public. Contextually, it can refer to personal property, family, home, characteristics, duties, or identity.

G2398

John 8:44 · Word #39

Lexicon G2398

Lemmaἴδιος
Transliterationídios
Strong'sG2398
DefinitionPertaining to oneself or one's own; belonging to or associated with a specific person, entity, or group. The term fundamentally denotes possession or close association and may describe what is proper, characteristic, peculiar, or exclusive to the subject. In a broader sense, it is used to distinguish what is private, particular, or distinct from what is general, common, or public. Contextually, it can refer to personal property, family, home, characteristics, duties, or identity.

Morphology PRO.D GEN N PL All morphology codes

Part of Speech PRO.D — Demonstrative Pronoun — Points to something specific
Case GEN — Genitive — Possession, source, or separation
Gender N — Neuter — Grammatical neuter
Number PL — Plural — More than one

Common Translation

Phraseown
Literalown

Lexical Info

Lemmaἴδιος
Strong'sG2398

SIBI-P1 Translation G2398-08

one's own

Morphological NotesAdjective/determiner; accusative masculine singular form of ἴδιος, modifying a masculine singular noun in the accusative case.
Rendering RationaleThe adjective ἴδιον (accusative masculine singular) denotes what belongs to or is associated with oneself, marking possession or personal distinction. "One's own" preserves the root sense of personal belonging while functioning adjectivally with an implied masculine singular object.

View full lexicon entry for G2398 →

SILEX v2

SIBI-P2 (Context-Aware)

own

Same as P1No — adjusted for context
RationaleP1 is a bit verbose; simply 'own' fits idiomatic possessive construction.